The moon phase function has evolved from its traditional role as an accompaniment to men’s perpetual calendars to a “poetic” complication, used more often in ladies’ watches. It has been reimagined in many ways that depart from the traditional blue-sky-gold-moon-and-stars configuration, but Blancpain finds a way to maintain tradition while updating the function for a modern ladies’ watch. The Blancpain Villeret Date Moonphase, introduced at Baselworld 2017, sports the traditional moon phase colors and configuration – as it should in a traditional collection such as the Blancpain Villeret – but with a few small tweaks to make it feminine, even poetic.
If you look closely, you will see that the moon has eyelashes, lips that look as if lipstick has been applied and, what’s that? – a beauty spot. The artificial mole or beauty spot (known as a mouche for its resemblance of a fly) was regarded in 18th century France as symbolizing a playfully teasing attitude. Mouches were used by coquettish ladies of the Court as messages to their suitors that differed according to where they were placed.
We’ll get to those in a minute, but first let us take examine the dial up in general.We’ll start with these iconic hands. They’re quite huge and have the proper quantity of lume to accompany them. Like many moves from the 8500 lineage, it’s a different hour hand. Like other POs, two distinct colors of lume can be used for each of the main hands, a great choice when the hands have the identical basic shape to prevent possible confusion.A ton of grim lume is used through, but the second hand receives green lume. It might appear impossible to confuse hands, but in adverse conditions, like low light or underwater, it is completely possible at a quick glance. One way to reduce that possibility is to utilize two quite different shapes of hands, but yet another is using 2 distinct colors of lume such as Breitling Superocean Vs Omega Planet Ocean Replica did here. As you may expect in a diving watch of the quality, the degree of the lume is extremely impressive. In addition, I enjoy the ideal symmetry of mark despite using a 3:00 date.The applied markers really are a wonderful touch. Also note that the cardinal markers are quite a bit shorter than the others. That might have been a purely stylistic decision, but with at least one marker differ than others (a unique contour at 12, for instance) is fantastic for orienting the opinion at total shadow. These also help maintain symmetry with the gap generated by the date complication in 3:00.
The movement is a next-generation caliber made by Blancpain specifically for ladies’ watches and is an example of the commitment being made by luxury watch brands to develop a stable of calibers sized for ladies’ watches that are equipped with all the advancements in watchmaking that are often reserved just for men’s movements. The Caliber 913QL is an evolution of the women’s Caliber 953, a 21mm-diameter movement that has been a staple of ladies’ watches at Blancpain. It remains the same size but now has a high-performance silicon balance spring. Silicon’s low density makes it lighter and thus more shock-resistant. It is also impervious to magnetic fields and generally more stable, with improved isochronism.
In addition, the 913 has a glucydur balance wheel with gold micrometric regulating screws, which makes it adjustable and also more shock-resistant than its predecessor. There is also an improved winding system that uses a ball-bearing mounted rotor. The sapphire case back reveals the rotor, which is red gold with a snailed bevel, polished chamfers and straight and circular Côtes de Genève patterns. The Caliber 913QL is fitted with a moon phase module, a wheel with 59 cogs covering two complete 29.5-day lunar cycles. It has a 40-hour power reserve.
At 29.2mm, the Blancpain Villeret Date Moonphase is a very small watch considering there is a moon phase plus a date and a seconds hand, a rare advantage in a small ladies’ automatic. It is evidence of Blancpain’s commitment to producing size-appropriate high-grade calibers dedicated to ladies’ watches in its elite collections. The date is elegantly spaced out just inside the hour track, indicated by a red-tipped pointer. The bezel is set with 48 diamonds and there are eight diamond indexes as well as four applied Roman numerals in the signature Villeret font. The dial is opaline and the strap is taupe-colored alligator. There are two references, one in 18k gold, priced at $19,900, and in steel at $16,600. blancpain.com