Patek Philippe. A Fine and Rare 18k White Gold Automatic Annual Calendar Wristwatch with Regulator-Style Dial
This watch is pictured with straps made of endange… Read more
Patek Philippe. A Fine and Rare 18k White Gold Automatic Annual Calendar Wristwatch with Regulator-Style Dial

Signed Patek Philippe, Genève, Ref. 5235G-001, Movement No. 5'727'826, Case No. 6'118'457, Circa 2017

Details
Patek Philippe. A Fine and Rare 18k White Gold Automatic Annual Calendar Wristwatch with Regulator-Style Dial
Signed Patek Philippe, Genève, Ref. 5235G-001, Movement No. 5'727'826, Case No. 6'118'457, Circa 2017
Movement: Automatic, 31-260 REG QA, stamped with the PP Seal, 29 jewels
Dial: Silvered, regulator-style dial with Arabic and baton numerals, two windows for date in English
Case: 18k white gold, sapphire crystal display snap on back, 40mm diam.
Buckle: Patek Philippe 18k white gold buckle
Accompanied By: A Patek Philippe Certificate of Origin dated March 23, 2017, product literature, a Patek Philippe leather envelope, a Patek Philippe presentation box and outer packaging
Special Notice
This watch is pictured with straps made of endangered or protected animal materials such as alligator or crocodile. These endangered species straps are shown for display purposes only and are not for sale. Christie’s will remove and retain the strap prior to shipment from the sale site. At some sale sites, Christie’s may, at its discretion, make the displayed endangered species strap available to the buyer of the lot free of charge if collected in person from the sale site within 1 year of the date of the auction. Please check with the department for details on a particular lot.

Lot Essay

Reference 5235 was released at Baselworld in 2012. The uniqueness of this watch lies in its movement which is constructed with the caliber 31-260 REG QA, the last letters standing for Régulateur Quantième Annuel. This is the first ever modern Patek Philippe annual calendar wristwatch produced with a regulator dial. In horological history, a regulator was a centrally located clock found in watchmaker workshops, with the large minute hand taking up visual importance. This allowed the watchmakers to regulate the watches they were building against the time displayed on the central regulator, hence the name. The regulator dial allows for more accuracy than a normal watch because it has a non-coaxial hour and minute hands, which means that the hour and minute hands do not share the central pinion position on the dial, but are independently placed.

More from An Evening of Exceptional Watches

View All
View All