Designed for maritime-inspired sophistication and high-performance timekeeping, the Admiral 45 Chronograph merges Corum’s iconic nautical heritage with modern functionality. With bold aesthetics and rugged construction, this timepiece is the ideal companion for both seafaring adventures and everyday wear.
At its core lies the automatic CO 132 caliber, offering a 42-hour power reserve, 28,800 vibrations per hour (4 Hz), and 39 jewels, ensuring smooth chronograph operation and reliable precision. It features hours, minutes, small seconds, date, and chronograph functions, making it a versatile and performance-driven watch.
The 45 mm case is crafted from lightweight yet highly durable Grade 5 titanium, with a 14.3 mm thickness and exceptional 300-meter water resistance (30 ATM)—ready for serious aquatic environments.
Its silver brass dial, finished with the signature “Grenadier Fendu” guilloché pattern, reflects light beautifully while enhancing visual depth. Skeletonized Dauphine-variant hands, rhodium-coated and filled with black Super-LumiNova®, offer excellent legibility. Distinctive nautical pennants mark the hours on the flange, paying tribute to the Admiral collection’s sailing legacy.
Completing the watch is a black vulcanized rubber strap for superior durability and comfort, secured with a triple-blade folding clasp in stainless steel with a titanium Grade 5 cover, ensuring both security and style.
Timeless elegance in yellow gold
This large model (33.7 × 25.5 mm) of the iconic Tank Louis Cartier features a quartz movement housed in a 750/1000 yellow gold case.
It showcases a silver grené dial with blued steel gladius-shaped hands, protected by mineral glass. The pearly crownis adorned with a sapphire cabochon, while a dark gray alligator strap and a yellow gold ardillon buckle (750/1000) complete the look.
Thickness: 6.3 mm
Water resistance: Up to 30 meters
Elegance in a slender form
The Mini model (28.0 × 15.2 mm) features a quartz movement housed in a streamlined steel case.
It showcases a silver sunray dial, blued gladius-shaped hands, and sapphire crystal. The polygonal crown is adorned with a faceted synthetic spinel cabochon.
Completed with a navy blue polished alligator leather strap and a steel pin buckle.
A timepiece like jewelry
The iconic Baignoire de Cartier, now in a Small version (31.4 × 23.1 mm), entirely crafted in 750/1000 yellow gold.
Its oval case houses a quartz movement, with a silver dial, blued gladius-shaped hands, and sapphire crystal. The crown is adorned with a sapphire cabochon, and the rigid bracelet is also made of 750/1000 yellow gold.
Thickness: 6.9 mm. Water-resistant up to 30 meters.
Cartier classic in a modern edition
The larger version of the iconic Tank Must watch (33.7 × 25.5 mm), equipped with the innovative SolarBeat™ light-powered movement.
Features a steel case, silver sunray dial, blued gladius-style hands, and a crown set with a spinel cabochon. Completed by a steel bracelet with a refined butterfly clasp.
Thickness: 6.6 mm. Water resistance: up to 30 meters.
As Light as Air, As Blue as Its Crown.
Floating with effortless grace, the Ballon Bleu de Cartier adorns the wrists of both men and women with refined elegance.
Its signature feature — the deep blue cabochon crown — subtly shifts the trajectory of the Roman numerals, creating a visual dance across the guilloché dial.
Convex curves, blued sword-shaped hands, and polished or satin-finished link bracelets all define the watch’s harmonious design.
A creation that orbits gently within the universe of Cartier watchmaking, the Ballon Bleu is timeless, weightless, and unmistakably iconic.
The Aeternitas Mega – the most complicated wristwatch in the world – is the pinnacle of success in the art of watchmaking in terms of complexity and complications. With 36 complications and 1’483 components, the Aeternitas Mega is a wonder of micro-mechanic and watchmaking know-how. Wholly manufactured in-house, each of the 1,483 components, was designed to give the watch an elegant design in the pure traditions of the old “cadraturiers” of the Vallée de Joux. The name of the Aeternitas comes from Latin and means eternity. It is in tribute to the eternal calendar in the Aeternitas Mega that follows a 1000-year cycle renewable to infinity.