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Two watches bring modern engineering and classic craftsmanship born in Glashütte
Moritz Grossmann has long stood as one of the finest representatives of German watchmaking, where precision, handcraft, and restrained elegance converge. Founded in Glashütte, the brand continues to uphold the philosophy of its namesake, combining traditional techniques with contemporary design and technical innovation.
In 2013, the manufactory introduced its first in-house tourbillon, the Calibre 103.0, a mechanical masterpiece featuring a flying tourbillon inspired by Alfred Helwig, who invented this distinctive type of tourbillon construction in 1920 at the German School of Watchmaking in Glashütte. In its latest creations, Moritz Grossmann revisits this renowned function with two new models, the Tourbillon Titanium and the Tourbillon Tremblage.
Both watches share the same three-part case construction, measuring 44.5 mm in diameter and 13.9 mm in thickness, with sapphire crystals featuring anti-reflective coating on both sides. The Tourbillon Titanium presents the complication in a titanium case with a subtle metallic sheen, while the Tourbillon Tremblage exudes classical refinement in 18-carat white gold. Each timepiece is fitted with a sapphire crystal caseback, and both models are water-resistant to 30 meters.

The Tourbillon Titanium features a solid silver dial adorned with a fine grain d’orge guilloché pattern, entirely engraved by hand using historical rose engines. It displays off-centre hour and small seconds subdials, with all scales and typography printed in black. The manually crafted steel hands are annealed to a brown-violet hue.
The Tourbillon Tremblage, meanwhile, showcases the traditional tremblage technique on its solid silver dial, finished in a warm salmon tone. The surface is engraved by hand with a burin guided in trembling motions, creating a soft matte texture that diffuses light beautifully. It features white-printed Arabic numerals, a classic minute scale, and polished steel hands. Both watches retain the regulator-style layout, with off-centre hours at 3 o’clock, small seconds at 9 o’clock, and the large flying tourbillon visible at 6 o’clock.
Inside both models beats the in-house Calibre 103.0, a hand-wound movement featuring a 16 mm flying tourbillon cage that completes one rotation every three minutes. It operates at a frequency of 18,000 vph (2.5 Hz) and offers a 73-hour power reserve. Both versions are paired with hand-stitched black alligator leather straps, the Tourbillon Titanium with a titanium butterfly clasp and white stitching, and the Tourbillon Tremblage with a matching white gold clasp.
The Tourbillon Titanium is limited to 12 pieces and is priced at EUR 197,200 (approximately AED 843,900), while the Tourbillon Tremblage is limited to just 8 pieces and priced at EUR 247,400 (approximately AED 1,058,000).
For more information, visit Moritz Grossmann’s official website.
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