The Grande et Petite Sonnerie, which is handcrafted by the greatest master of modern watchmaking, sold for $7,63 million at A Collected Man.

I couldn’t help but wonder: Do we love watches, or their stories hidden on the dial? Especially, if those watches are one of the rare pieces handcrafted by the great watchmakers who have devoted their whole life to this job, there are so many stories to tell. One of these timepieces is Philippe Dufour’s Grande et Petite Sonnerie, which was recently sold a sale at A Collected Man, a London dealer. The Grande et Petite Sonnerie set a world record as the most expensive independent watch ever sold, with $7.33 million.

Philippe Dufour Grande et Petite Sonnerie rose gold A Collected Man2 1296x
A Collected Man

“If you do something like everyone else, you cannot be recognised. When you are small, you must do something special to stand out.”

Philippe Dufour

Dufour says that “if you do something like everyone else, you cannot be recognised. When you are small, you must do something special to stand out.” With time, he became one of the greatest watchmakers in the world over time. And he has produced series such as Grande et Petite Sonnerie, the Duality and the Simplicty throughout his career. For instance, Grande et Petite Sonnerie series features only 8 timepieces and one of them was sold for a new world record a few days ago. Indeed, Dufour had produced this complicated Grande Sonnerie movement firstly to use in a minute repeater pocket watch for Audemars Piguet. However, he was frustrated by the design of watch and then he decided to modernize the movement for a wristwatch in his own name. Of course, the production stage of such a fine watch was not easy and short. As a result, the Grande de Petite Sonnerie, which took Dufuor’s almost ten years, is his most complicated and perhaps significant timepiece.

Philippe Dufour Grande et Petite Sonnerie rose gold A Collected Man11 1296x 1
A Collected Man

Dufour recalls that “I never stopped, not even for a single day. Not for Christmas, not for holidays, nothing. Every day, I was working. I remember going to sleep around 11 at night, because my eyes were crying from focusing all day.”*