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(Pre-Order) Favre Leuba 1737 Triple Calendar Black 00.20501.108.01.101
(Pre-Order) Favre Leuba 1737 Triple Calendar Black 00.20501.108.01.101
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Details
Details
Delivery: The product will be shipped in Sep 2026.
Total price: $4500 - Final $4000 will be billed when Product lands
Released at Watches and Wonders Geneva 2026, the 1737 Triple Calendar celebrates Favre Leuba’s mastery of classical complications and honors the brand’s founding year. As the first model of the maison’s fifth pillar, it follows the Chief, Deep Raider, Sea Sky, and Harpoon collections. Rooted in traditional watchmaking, the 1737 unites calendar and astronomical features with modern 1950s-inspired geometry, offering a refined, contemporary expression of one of horology’s most timeless complications.
Features
Features
Delivery: The product will be shipped in Sep 2026.
Total price: $4500 - Final $4000 will be billed when Product lands
Reference: 00.20501.108.01.101
Bracelet: Black Leather Strap
Case: 39mm x 12.11mm Thickness - Stainless Steel
Lug Width: 20mm
Movement: FLD06 - Automatic - 56 Hour Power Reserve
Functions: HMS, Day-Date, Moon Phase, Month
Box and Papers: Inner/outer boxes, and warranty card
Crystal: Sapphire
Water Resistance: 50M
Bracelet size: 7.5”
Condition
Condition
New
Brand History
Brand History
Favre Leuba traces its roots back to 1737 in Le Locle, Switzerland, when Abraham Favre is documented as running his own watchmaking workshop.
Over the next generations, his descendants expanded the firm: in 1792 a formal firm “A. Favre & Fils” was established, and by 1815 Henry-Auguste Favre partnered with Auguste Leuba, coalescing into the name Favre-Leuba.
The brand became known not just for fine complications and precise movements, but for technical innovation: in the 1950s and 60s, Favre Leuba developed proprietary calibers (FL101, FL103/104) and produced landmark tool watches such as the Bivouac—the first mechanical wristwatch combining altimeter and barometer—and the Deep Blue diver’s watch.
However, the quartz revolution of the 1970s–80s strained many traditional mechanical watchmakers, and in 1985 the Favre family was forced to cede control of the company.
Over the years the brand passed through various owners, including stints with LVMH and, later, Titan (of India).
Ethos Watches
In recent years, Favre Leuba has attempted revivals and re-launches: in 2011 Titan acquired it, and as of 2024–2025 it is undergoing yet another revival with fresh watch collections, renewed branding (dropping the hyphen), and an eye toward reconnecting with its heritage—particularly its longstanding ties to India.
