Patek Philippe Replica Watches of superb quality at www-watchtops.com. Perfect look, top quality , accessible prices.

AAA Grade Replica Patek Philippe Watches

Shopping Cart 0 Itmes

Now in you cart0 Itmes

Best Brand:Bell & Ross | Montblanc | Certina | Vacheron Constantin | Zenith | Audemars Piguet | Milus | Franck Muller | Wyler Geneve | Ulysse Nardin |

You Are Here:

Watches >> Patek Philippe Replica Watches

Replica Patek Philippe Watches

We offer an extensive selection of Replica Patek Philippe Watches which come with a great variety of styles at rock bottom prices. You can achieve your dream of owning a luxury watch which you are long for by buying a delicate watch from our online shop.

Purchasing an exquisite Patek Philippe Replica Watches is a smart investment. It will highlight your life style and social status with its unrivalled brand value. The watches shown on our site are tested carefully before shipping out. We guarantee every step of you transaction including payment, delivery and so on.

Sponsored Links

Payment
Patek Philippe In America By John Reardon

in America is a book on how this brand conquered the United States. The sub title of the book, Marketing the World’s Foremost Watch, covers it pretty well. The impressive dimensions of this hard cover book – 13″ x 11″ – and the 360 pages with over 500 images reveal that this must be something special. The arrival of Patek Philippe in the USA has been documented using archives, photographs and numerous advertisements starting in 1860. The author of this book, John Reardon, did an excellent job creating such a valuable treasure for collectors and admirers of Patek Philippe watches.Patek Philippe in America contains 8 chapters covering the marketing of the brand from the 19th century to the 1980s. Throughout the book, notable owners from the US of Patek Philippe watches are being mentioned and shown on photographs. What to think of Joe DiMaggio? Or John F. Kennedy who received a Patek Philippe autonomous quartz clock during his stay in Berlin in 1963, famous for his historic speech to the people of Berlin stating ‘Ich bin ein Berliner’.While reading though the chapters (especially those covering the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s), I can’t help thinking about one of my favourite TV series of this moment, . The advertisements are very clever and appealing, using great photographs and slogans (“One of the world’s costliest watches is made of steel”, referring to the 1978 campaign for the PP Nautilus).Special attention to The Caliber 89 – world’s most complicated watch – which get a few pages of coverage on its own. Introduced in 1989, it celebrates 150 years of the best watchmaking possible. This double dialed pocket watch has 33 complications and consists of over 1728 parts. John Reardon’s book shows Warren Buffet holding a Calibre 89 watch in white gold while wearing his own Patek Philippe ref.3944J.This book is a very well (and passionately) written and covers actually more than marketing the best watch brand in the United States. Patek Philippe’s rich history and philosophy on exclusive time pieces are so well documented, this can only be done by someone who has been working for Patek Philippe, like John Reardon. This makes it a book worth for every Patek Philippe collector, not only for those who resides in the United States.If you are a collector of Patek Philippe watches, you should be aware that John Reardon also published a Reference Guide (Volume 1) belonging to the “Patek Philippe in America” series and also limited to 1500 copies.The Reference Guide to Patek Philippe watches covers 1000 models, presented in order by reference number. Per model, John documented the reference number, materials used, movement caliber, dimensions and age. Each watch is pictured in the book with a brochure or catalogue photograph. A distinction is being made between pocket watches and wrist watches, which I think is very pleasant for collectors of each (or both) type of watches. Very useful are the pictures with each watch and the overview in the back of the book, listing all movement and reference numbers.You don’t need both books in order to have a good overview, but I would recommend both for the serious Patek Philippe collector.John Reardon is a well respected and noted expert in watches and clocks. He has worked for Sotheby’s New York, the Henry Stern Watch Agency (Patek Philippe USA) and he now works for Betteridge Jewelers as a Director of Vintage and Estate Watches. His books can be ordered on-line through his website . Patek Philippe in America – Marketing the World’s Foremost Watch is still available (only a few copies left) for $395 and the Reference Guide (Volume 1 Men’s Watches) for $295. These prices exclude shipping.

Replica of The Legendary Gondolo Chronometro ref. 5098P Platinum by Patek Philippe

Launched in 1993 the Gondolo collection is Patek Philippe’s contemporary interpretation of the Art Deco style. It demonstrates the brand’s commitment to form watches which figure proudly in the company’s legacy. The name of the collection was derived from the “Chronometro Gondolo” watches that were manufactured by Patek Philippe for the renowned Brazilian retailer « Gondolo & Labouriau » between 1902 and 1930.A new cambered, tonneau-shaped model from the Gondolo collection is inspired by a historic Patek Philippe Chronometro Gondolo from 1925.Patek Philippe Men’s Chronometro Gondolo 5098P replica watch. A genuine surprise by Patek Philippe at this year’s BASELWORLD is a watch of great poise with an evocative name: Chronometro Gondolo. In 1927, the last watch of this series was issued from Geneva. Now, 80 years later, the legend is reborn….Patek Philippe Gondolo replica watch.The Legendary Patek Philippe Gondolo. By Pierre Maillard Eighty years ago, in 1927 (the time when, in all modesty, our own publication house was born), Patek Philippe delivered its last Chronometro Gondolo to Brazil. The name, destined to become a legend, designated the watches made by Patek Philippe especially for the Gondolo & Labouriau watch resellers and jewellers, located in Rio de Janeiro. Since the end of the 19th century, and during nearly 30 years, Patek Philippe created an exclusive collection for them, one that notably contained a number of wristwatches with different shaped cases: square, rectangular, tonneau, and cushion. The aura of the Geneva watchmaker was such that, in Brazil, the expression ‘Patek’ signified quite simply a ‘watch’, whether it was a Patek Philippe timepiece or not.Within the Geneva Manufacture, the name Gondolo endured and, starting in 1993, it was given to the Gondolo Collection that comprised watches with different shapes revisited by Patek Philippe after delving into its very rich patrimony of timepieces. Many of these atypical watches, often inspired by the styles of the Art Déco period, required an exceptional savoir-faire, and provided the occasion to demonstrate the brand’s creative independence. To give a few examples, we might mention: the Reference 5099 or Cabriolet, a surprising watch with a cover that combines pink and white gold; the Gondolo Calendario, the first annual calendar in a tonneau shape; the intriguing Gondolo Trapeze; and the jewellery series incorporating the charming Gondolo Gemma and Gondolo Serrata in their very particular curved forms.This large and original family is today becoming even larger with a new creation, the Gondolo Chronometro, inspired by its very highly styled and historic predecessor that was sold in Brazil.A perfect tonneau Among the classic forms in watchmaking, the so-called ‘tonneau’ shape is perhaps one of the most delicate and complicated to design and develop. Everything depends on the equilibrium of the lines and the degree of their curves, and of the proportions between height and width. Some ‘tonneau’ are heavy and bulky, while others are too elongated or too ‘bulbous’.However, in Patek Philippe’s new piece, the equilibrium is interpreted in a particularly subtle manner. With a height of 42 mm, a width of 32 mm, a total thickness of 8.90 mm from crystal to crystal, and 11.45 mm from crystal to horns, the geometry works perfectly. These dimensions confer upon the Gondolo Chronometro a very special refinement, seen also in its slightly curved profile, which makes it comfortable to wear.The same curved lines continue in the dial’s sapphire crystal as well as the crystal case back, which is no small feat considering the hardness of sapphire. The crystals alone required advanced technology to flawlessly integrate them into the case, not only because of aesthetic concerns, but also because the Gondolo Chronometro (water-resistant to 3 ATM) must satisfy the most severe criteria for protection. While the piece draws inspiration from the brand’s past, its movement is a small new ‘treasure’ from the present.A shaped watch, a shaped movementSince the 1930s and the launch of the Calibre 9-90, Patek Philippe has never since created a shaped movement that was ‘simple’, meaning one without any complications. This however changed with the design and creation of the Calibre 25-21 REC, a rectangular movement with manual winding.Aligning with the exterior design, very ‘early century’ of the new Gondolo Chronometro, the architecture of this new mechanical movement follows very closely the aesthetic codes and technical specifications that prevailed at the time. From a design standpoint, this choice is notably expressed in the form of a curved ‘S’ of the bridge of the centre wheel and in the slender cut-outs of the bridges of the escape wheel and the seconds wheel, which offer a clear view of the beating heart of the movement, whose 142 component parts are housed in a space of 24.60 mm by 21.50 mm, with a thickness of 2.55 mm. The decoration is rigorously in line with classical watchmaking. The Côtes de Genève pattern is perfectly aligned vertically, and the optimal finishing touches of the parts include chamfering and polishing, all of which earns the timepiece the coveted Poinçon de Genève or Geneva Seal.From a technical point of view, its ‘acclimation’ to the most modern standards of precision and working reliability involves the use of the elegant Gyromax balance (a Patek Philippe invention patented in 1951 that, thanks to its eight inertia-blocks split like collets, facilitates the balancing of the regulating organ, and allows the watch’s operation to be thus finely adjusted). Its frequency of 4 Hertz (28,800 vibrations per hour) guarantees optimal movement stability and precision. With manual winding, the Calibre 25-21 REC has a working reserve of 44 hours.The face of an angelThe face of the new Chronometro Gondolo is a faithful replica of the one dating back to 1925. In rhodium-plated gold, the dial, which seems to delicately retract from the side of the horns, has very fine hand-guilloché. As we know, the decorative technique of guillochage consists of a fine network of engraved lines that cross in a regular and symmetrical manner. Dating back to the 16th century, this technique nearly disappeared.However, in drawing upon ancestral techniques for its new products, Patek Philippe is contributing to saving the art of guillochage. And with what results! We can admire the two zones of the dial with a delicate guilloché that creates the impression of a gradual opening. The zones are separated by an oval minutes circle with black lacquer Breguet numerals, highlighted by two arc-shaped cartouches bearing the signature of Patek Philippe and the name of Chronometro Gondolo.The delicate dial is meticulously brought to life by two ‘Stuart Pear’ hands in oxidized black gold, and adorns the exclusively carved platinum case with its lovely silvery sheen. As are all current Patek Philippe platinum watches, a small diamond is set at 6 o’clock between the two horns of the bracelet. A system of screw-in bars allows the strap to be fixed to the case. Made of mat black alligator leather, with large scales, the strap comes with a platinum tongued buckle, also inspired from the historic model.While the new Chronometro Gondolo is directly inspired from its ancestral model, we could not imagine however that Patek Philippe would want to re-visit the very ingenious sales methods used by its Brazilian distributors of the epoch – they ran a sort of posh lottery. The distributors created a Buyers’ Club, composed of a maximum of 180 members who loved fine timepieces. The watch’s purchase price, at that time, was 790 francs, and these aficionados would participate in a weekly lottery spread out over 79 weeks, paying each time 10 francs for the lottery ticket. At the first week’s drawing, the winner received the Gondolo Chronometro free. Then with each passing week, the new winner would have to pay sums that progressed from 10 to 780 francs. The 101 associates who remained, would pay each the full price, or 790 francs.This method of sales by lottery was a huge success with businessmen in Brazil who found this mode of acquisition to be rather entertaining, and it let them circumvent the ban on gambling. It also allowed the Brazilian distributor to sell 180 Patek Philippe watches per Club in less than two years.So, let’s bet that the Geneva brand will not renew this style of making sales. But then, there is no reason to, since there are so many of the brand’s fans who will want to acquire this very lovely and elegant timepiece.High Quality Patek Philippe Imitation Watches