Girard-Perregaux

Girard-Perregaux
Industry Watch Making, Haute Horlogerie
Founded 1791
Headquarters La Chaux-de-Fonds, Switzerland
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
François-Henri Pinault, Antonio Calce
Products Watches
Parent Sowind group, Kering
Website www.girard-perregaux.com

Girard-Perregaux (French pronunciation: [ʒiʁaʁ pɛʁəɡo], zhi-rar perəgo) is a high-end Swiss watch manufacture with its origins dating back to 1791. It is situated in La Chaux-de-Fonds, Switzerland and is a part of the Sowind group, a subsidiary of Kering.[1]

History

In 1791, watchmaker and goldsmith Jean-François Bautte signed his first watches. He created a manufacturing company in Geneva grouping, for the first time ever, all the watch making facets of that time, which meant starting from the engineering of the watch all the way to the final hand assembly and hand polishing of each watch. In 1852, the watchmaker Constant Girard founded the Girard & Cie Firm in La Chaux-de-Fonds. He, then, married Marie Perregaux and the Girard-Perregaux Manufacture was born in 1856. In 1906, Constant Girard-Gallet, who took over control of the Manufacture from his father, took over the Bautte House and merged it with Girard-Perregaux & Cie.[2] Since then, the brand has pursued its activities by reinforcing from the 1980s its position in the domain of prestigious mechanical watches, Haute Horlogerie, under the lead of Luigi Macaluso. In 2011, Sowind Group, the holding incorporating Girard-Perregaux, became a subsidiary of Kering.

Constant Girard produced the first ever major commercial production of a wristwatch, made for German naval officers and ordered by German Kaiser Wilhelm I

The Manufacture has approximately 80 patents in the watch-making domain and is the originator of many innovative concepts.

In 1965, Girard-Perregaux designed the first mechanic movement at high frequency, with the balance beating at 36,000 vibrations/hour: the Gyromatic HF

Manufacture

Girard-Perregaux relies on being a manufacturer of movements and watches and a manufacturer of cases and bands. They bring together some tens of different components: watchmakers, engineers, movement decorators, polishers, etc. This global approach, founded on the traditional know-how of the watch-making craftsmanship, allows them to create and direct the high-quality watches and movements from the assembly stages all the way to the final encasement.[4]

The Girard-Perregaux Manufacture designs and develops its own movements:

Collections

Tourbillon sous trois ponts d'or.

Tourbillon with three gold bridges

It’s the emblematic model of Girard-Perregaux.[5] In 1884, Constant Girard submitted to the United States Patent Office a patent of the design of the movement “Tourbillon with three gold bridges.” The three bridges were redesigned in the form of arrows and placed parallel to each other. The movement was no longer just a functional and technical element, but it also became an element of design in every way. In 1889, the Tourbillon with three gold bridges was awarded a gold medal at the Universal Exposition of Paris. In 1980, Girard-Perregaux decided to make 20 pieces to conform to the original of 1889: 1500 hours of work were necessary to create the first one. To celebrate its bicentenary in 1991, the company created a miniaturised wristwatch version of its famed Tourbillon with three gold Bridges. Since then, it is offered in different versions, and is sometimes associated with other watchmakers’ complications.

Main models

Girard-Perregaux 1966.

Out of the high-end watch collection, the most well known watches of Girard-Perregaux are: Vintage 1945 (with a rectangular case and a design inspired by an Art Deco style watch dating back to 1945), ww.tc (standing for worldwide time-control, this collection displays 24 time zones on the dial), Girard-Perregaux 1966, Laureato Evo³, and the Cat’s Eye (from the feminine line).

Girard-Perregaux is also famed for its signature complication piece: the Bi-Axial Tourbillon; it has released this complication in a number of limited edition watches, including the 2012 release of the Bi-Axial Tourbillon DLC Titanium wristwatch which renovated the trend in line with modern titanium cases.[6]

Girard-Perregaux have recently introduced new models in both the Vintage 1945 and Girard-Perregaux 1966 collections for 2012, In respect of the Girard-Perregaux 1966, they have introduced a new Girard-Perregaux 1966 Full Calendar and a 1966 Chronograph which has been highlighted as a new grand classic by Girard-Perregaux themselves.[7] This Girard-Perregaux 1966 is a slightly larger faced model than previously issued by the watchmaker at 42mm and may be a sign of the changing demands upon watchmakers by the watch enthusiast community.

As for the Vintage 1945 its back with its three rose gold bridges and rectangular case design. The Vintage 1945 is powered by the Girard-Perregaux 9600-0019, Mechanical self-winding movement an all inhouse movement...[8]

In 2013, Girard-Perregaux presented its Constant Escapement, an answer to the waning power in traditional mechanical watches. The key component of this completely new design of the escapement is a buckled silicon blade thinner than a hair (14 µm) which acts as an energy micro-storage unit delivering constant impulses to the balance wheel.

In 2013, Girard-Perregaux presented its Constant Escapement, an answer to the waning power in traditional mechanical watches.

Girard-Perregaux Museum

Since 1999, the Villa Marguerite, a building in La Chaux-de-Fonds from the beginning of the 20th century, has housed the Girard-Perregaux Museum. A selection of old watches and documents illustrating the history of the brand is presented there.

Few historical pieces

  1. ^ Le Tourbillon sous trois Ponts d'or Girard-Perregaux "La Esmeralda" chef d'oeuvre de technicité et véritable leçon de gravure, by Ariane Maradan, CHRONOMETROPHILIA n°72 HIVER/WINTER 2012, p.11 à p.28

See also

See also

References

  1. Socha, Miles, "PPR Takes Majority Stake in Sowind Group", Women's Wear Daily, July 4, 2011
  2. François Chaille, Girard-Perregaux
  3. François Chaille, Girard-Perregaux
  4. François Chaille, Girard-Perregaux
  5. website of the Fondation de la Haute Horlogerie, "Legendary watches"
  6. R.G. Holland, "Girard-Perregaux Bi-Axial DLC Titanium", October 2012
  7. The Watch Review Site, "Girard-Perregaux 1966 Chrongraph 42mm", March 2012
  8. The Watch Review Site, "Girard-Perregaux Vintage 1945 Three Gold Bridges", March 2012

Sources

External links

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