Showing posts with label Italian style. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Italian style. Show all posts

Thursday, February 27, 2025

Sharp Watch Shout Out: The Venezianico Redentore Bronzo

I found another amazing watch on the Venezianico watches website. This one is the Venezianico Redentore Bronzo or Venetian Redeemer Bronze. Isn't it beautiful?
Venezianico Redentore Bronzo (Venezianico website image)

It's just an amazing looking 40mm watch with a hand-aged antique bronze finish.  It's powered by a Miyota 9039 Automatic movement and it has sapphire crystal with an anti-reflective coating. The front of this watch is enough to earn it an instant sharp watch shout out! But, wait until you see the etched caseback!

The Horses of St. Mark captured on a
Venezianico Redentore Bronzo Caseback
(Venezianico website image)

Venezianico is taking pre-orders for this watch now.  The price is set at about $750. That's a very attainable price point for a dream watch like this. Unfortunately, I may have to do some plotting, planning, and scheming to get this one. But, if you can afford it, this looks like a very special timepiece. You can visit it here on the Venezianico website.




Saturday, December 21, 2024

Sharp Watch Shout Out: Venezianico Redentore Avventurina 40

I am seriously in lust with the watches of a relatively new watch brand based in Italy:  Venezianico.  Established in 2017, they have five collections that cover sport, dive, racing, skeleton, and dress watch styles. But, the watch that has really captured my imagination is called the Venezianico Redentore Avventurina. It has a dial made of a fine Venetian glass material called Aventurine. Glass infused with flecks of copper, Aventurine looks like a field of stars against a black sky. My screen capture from their website doesn't do this watch justice.  You'll just need to poke around on their website:  https://us.venezianico.com/

Venezianico Redentore Avventurina 40

The brand has adopted the medieval crosses typically found in the architecture of Venetian churches and cathedrals as its logo. Prices are competitive with brands like Nivada Grenchen and Movado. I think these watches are amazing looking and the prices are attainable for mere mortals.

Sunday, April 20, 2014

Salvatore Ferragamo and Ferragamo Watches

Ambitious and Creative Salvatore Ferragamo: 

The Men’s Watches Edition

Ferragamo is a brand that is synonymous with high-end Italian craftsmanship and style, but, of course, it wasn’t always that way. Young Salvatore Ferragamo wanted to create something he could call his own. He started out at the ambitious age of thirteen when he opened a shoemaking shop in 1911 in Bonito, Italy. Moving to the U.S. a year later, he joined one of his brothers in a footwear factory in Boston, MA. The machinery therein enthralled the fourteen year old boy, but even at this young age he worried about the maximum quality that a factory could produce.


Salvatore in the creative process via Gevril Group

In the next ten years Ferragamo moved to California and even starting making shoes for the stars of Hollywood at his own Hollywood Boot Shop. Even with all of his success in the U.S. Ferragamo missed Italy and the quality craftsmanship that came so naturally to him there, so he moved back to Italy in 1927 and began to build up the brand that exists today. He set up a factory in Florence and trained local artisans to help him. Neiman Marcus and Saks Fifth Avenue are among the first outside retailers to carry Ferragamo shoes. In August of 1962 Salvatore died of cancer at the age of 62, but his legacy lives on through his family and the contributions he has made to the world of fashion (voguepediaVogue).

 Photos via Gevril Group

Expanding to watches in 2003, the brand is still growing. The most recent example of the Ferragamo brand living on lies in the new Lungarno Chronograph watch collection. These are inspired by a hotel chain started by Salvatore in Florence Italy that expanded to five different locations in Florence and one in Rome. The watches are active and sporty while also holding up the classy, Italian style.

Buying one of these watches means making a couple of choices: three different face color pallets to choose from and your choice of three wrist straps. The faces come in blue, black or white and the wrist straps in blue, black or a combination of brushed and polished steel. The watch bezel has chamfered, polished edges and a brushed stainless steel surface for contrast.

Salvatore Ferragamo went after his dreams at a young age. He knew what he wanted to do and went for it. Because of his ambition and willingness to take risks, the Ferragamo brand still upholds beauty, innovation, and quality Italian craftsmanship he built it on.

About the author: Isabella Rivera also knows what she wants out of life – to make it as an actress in Hollywood. She is an aspiring timepiece collector who appreciates anything with a bold style. She writes for GevrilGroup.com, spreading the love of Ferragamo, Versace, and Gevril around the blogosphere.