
The titanium versions of the Pulse60 are priced at CHF 45,000, while the two-tone pink gold and titanium configuration is priced at CHF 59,000. In a segment where technical experimentation frequently enters six-figure territory, those numbers feel positively surprising on today’s market. This leaves me with a lasting impression of encouragement for the Pulse60. This feels like a classic reminder of what independent watchmaking can, and probably should, do in 2026. It explores a fundamental question differently: how can a wristwatch measure time more accurately?
Through execution, it also asks how a watch can do so thoughtfully, more intentionally, and more humanly. It’s a piece that communicates a design philosophy as clearly as the time it keeps, and from where I’m sitting, this needs to be a goal for how every independent operates today. An awareness of the importance of bringing something genuinely different to the market, not solely in the name of eccentricity, but for substance.
For more information, visit Dominique Renaud online.
Tim Vaux
2026-04-09 21:30:00

