News: Presenting the De Bethune DB28XP 10th Anniversary Watches
De Bethune Celebrates the 10th Anniversary of the DB28 drawing on the quintessence of its DNA, and releasing three new watches. When the first De Bethune DB28 was launched in 2010, De Bethune's idea was to present a timepiece with an identity all its own and a resolutely futuristic vision of the art of watchmaking. The distinctive case shape, the crown at 12 o'clock inspired by pocket watches. Just some of the hallmarks of the contemporary aestheticism specific to De Bethune. It is on this timepiece that De Bethune's unique and innovative floating lugs, designed also to significantly improve comfort, demonstrated their self-evident purpose. Since then, the DB28 has continued to express the past, present and future of watchmaking culture through its various iterations.
One has to go back to the DB Digitale and the Dream Watch 1 to understand the source of inspiration of the DB28. As we often talk about DNA, clearly, the DB28 is part of the same genealogy. They all stem from the same roots, and boldly mark a determination to contribute to the history of watchmaking.
De Bethune DB28XP Starry Sky
The new DB28XP Starry Sky reference DB28XPTIS3V2 is a watch that offers a firmament to behold, one in which the infinite blue unfolds. A nocturnal window to the far reaches and depths of space, the quest for perfection and beauty never truly leaves Denis Flageollet, the designer and master-watchmaker. Signs of this in this exceptional timepiece of pure style, are the dramatic arc of tension in the lines that meet the finesse of the polished 43 mm ultra-light titanium middle case, with the hallmarks of the contemporary expression of the art of watchmaking by De Bethune.
Classic by inspiration with its round, ultra-thin shape, its crown at 12 o'clock, and a hunter case back borrowed from pocket watches, the DB28 Starry Sky comes in ultra-lightweight, mirror-polished titanium. Its redesigned floating lugs only emphasize the modern, even futuristic character. Like an obsession, as a quest to represent the most beautiful sky, to capture its emotional power, and preserve it accurately so it can be worn on the wrist: DB28 XP Starry Sky offers a gaze into the infinite that has become a recurring theme throughout the brand’s creations.
As a way of marking the DB28’s 10th anniversary, and inspired by DB28 Skybridge, which featured a curved sky, De Bethune raises the stakes of complexity even further by creating a blue microlight firmament. Another first. The dial’s surface of peaks and valleys refracts light in yet more dimensions, offering a unique spectacle. Free and unconstrained, the mastery of blued titanium translates into a multitude of microgrooves that create a mesmerizing optical effect.
Into the deep blue expanse a multitude of small white gold pins driven through one by one with great care and accuracy recreating the actual magic of the stars on an actual night. Glittering sparkles give the night-time heavens an endless depth. A magical experience made all the more special by the fact that the firmament depicted is not random. The customer selects the date and hour and location, and De Bethune draws the sky map of the dial. True to the brand’s cues, DB28XP Starry Sky features the hour circle in silver, the minutes in Arabic numerals, the discreet De Bethune signature at 12 o'clock, and rose gold hands designed especially for this edition. Powering this watch is the De Bethune manual wound calibre DB2115V7 with a power reserve of 6 days.
Sticker Price CHF72,000 Swiss Francs —approximately $74,000 USD.
De Bethune DB28XP Ultra-Thin
To mark this important anniversary, De Bethune opens a fresh chapter in exploring a new universe: the realm of the ultra-thin. Ultra-thin as a self-evident evolution. The DB28XP is an ideal of beauty, of elegance that expresses purity in its most absolute version. As the first opus of a family that enters a new decade and encompasses all the work done on the DB28, the DB28XP is not about amplification. On the contrary, it’s about distilling the essence. Throughout the quest of designing an ultra-thin watch, De Bethune was driven as much by the technical challenge as the aesthetic challenge, by the complexity of ‘finesse’. An adventure in which absolute rigor maintains the balance between design aesthetics and engineering constraints.
Another challenge was to preserve the functionality and wear comfort of De Bethune’s famous floating lugs. Adapting this hallmark to a much thinner case was also a circle whose squaring Denis Flageollet particularly relished. As much a technical challenge as an aesthetic one, it concretizes the complexity of the “ultra-thinness” to be mastered. This in itself was also an adventure in which absolute rigor was the connective tissue between form and functionality. The case band has been completely redesigned, with a more pronounced curvature, flowing with the lines of the wrist and lugs —whose bullets incidentally have also entirely redesigned. The plate’s Microlight finish is echoed along the sides of the case band, rendered all the more meticulously in the absence of simple geometric forms.
Monochromatic by design, the DB28XP Ultra-Thin is first and foremost a reference to the very first DB28.
It's about all the levels at which one experiences a timepiece, its layers, reliefs, the light playing with shadows and reflections. Cut from titanium, the watch reveals an architectural fusion of space, time, and light that lingers long after the first glance. A multitude of different shapes —hemispherical, concave, spherical, a sequence of microlight, satin, polished, and blocked finishes. A continuous interplay of light and shadow.
The dial is entirely made of Microlight, which shakes off the dust of the conventional and offers a modern take on the traditional guilloche technique. On this generous flat surface, the new technique takes on its full meaning and reinforces the structure. By playing with light and shadow, it adds depth and offers a more architectural and dynamic result. The watch as a whole becomes more contemporary. The delta-shaped main plate —a De Bethune hallmark— is finished to perfectly reflect ambient light. The metal surface is patiently polished until it becomes a true mirror, a process that takes up to three hours. Ever so slowly and gradually the moment approaches when matter settles and atoms fall into place. That moment, that knowing you are just about to go too far with the boxwood grindstone and diamond paste. That split-second between a deep, flawless mirror finish and something less than perfect. All this is the result of the interaction between the brain, the eye, and the hand. It's a question of know-how. For telling time, no contrasting indexes, but little spheres polished like small satellites. They orbit a larger body, planet Earth, in the spirit of the solar system. A tone-on-tone pattern surrounds the central part of the elliptical dial, subtly revealing the movement’s wheels.
Finally, as a discreet De Bethune signature, the blued titanium inserts in the hands at the center. All of De Bethune’s timekeeping savoir-faire The hand-wound movement features De Bethune’s balance wheel, visible through the dial thanks to an opening at 6 o'clock. The result of continuously exploring the boundaries of physics and mathematics to improve timepiece operation, it benefits from the latest advances. Its diameter is not too large, either. Made of titanium, it is equipped with small white gold weights placed on the outside to give remarkable qualities of inertia, reliability, and regulating ability. Then there is balance spring. At De Bethune, this minute, extremely fine spring, considered to be the soul of the mechanical watch, maintains its true center of gravity with a flat terminal curve affixed to the outside of the balance-spring. Differences in the thickness of the blade add to the almost perfect precision of its concentric development. Among the many advantages: lower height, better adjustment of concentricity, finer adjustment of the racquet, no need for pins. The curve’s shape even acts as a shock absorber in case of impact. Finally, the material’s internal structure remains intact since it has been neither stressed nor bent. It is through these numerous tried and tested developments, which are constantly revisited and further improved, that De Bethune has succeeded in increasing the power reserve by 20 percent, bringing it to a total of 6 days.
The DB28XP is regarded as a timepiece that sublimates the cues of the DB28, a true watershed born from the meeting of the brand’s know-how with a resolutely futuristic vision for an ultra-thin watch.
Sticker Price CHF72,000 Swiss Francs —approximately $74,000 USD.
De Bethune DB28XP Tourbillon
The De Bethune DB28XP Tourbillon is directly inspired by the famous dial of the DB28 Digitale. Offering hour, minute, and seconds indications, the DB28XP Tourbillon features an elegant and minimalist white dial with silver reflections rendered in a hand-engraved “barley grain” guilloche pattern, highlighted by a blued hour circle. The tourbillon positioned at 6 o'clock is a titanium creation that beats at a frequency of 36,000 vph. It features an extraordinarily lightweight cage —0.18 grams, the lightest ever— that rotates on itself every thirty seconds and comprises 63 components —the lightest of which weighs less than 0.0001 grams. Like a flying insect, a microscale exoskeleton keeps it all together.
On the case back, as a nod to the Aiguille d'Or —the highest distinction of the Grand Prix d'Horlogerie de Genève— awarded to the first De Bethune DB28 on November 19th, 2011, the alignment of the planets on that evening in Geneva is depicted through a beautiful engraving with blue dots marking the planets. These are classic references which, in their layout and execution, reinforce the novel modern character of the timepiece. Faithful to the De Bethune spirit and soul, the DB28XP Tourbillon ably perpetuates the company's heritage: Daring aesthetics, exceptional mechanics.
For those that ask why the manual wound movement on this watch beats so fat, it is because today, a watch worn on the wrist is subjected to more action than may be safely compensated for. The position is abrupt and sometimes chaotic. The kinetic forces inflicted on a mechanical watchmaking movement should give pause. Just as Breguet had invented the tourbillon to meet the constraints of marine watches, De Bethune designed a tourbillon for the new dynamics of wristwatches. The laws of physics are clear: To compensate for the violence of wrist movements, the tourbillon cage must be as light as possible, operate at maximum frequency and speed of rotation at minimum weight and inertia. Only then can it fulfill its function in a watch for today.
Sticker Price CHF180,000 Swiss Francs —approximately $185,000 USD. For more info on De Bethune click here.