Back in the 1950s when you were setting off for a distant land, a key piece of gear would be your trusty tool watch. Today, you’d reach for something like a Rolex Explorer II with its chunky steel case and bezel, bold handset and healthy application of lume. A Seiko SPB143 would make an excellent option on a tighter budget where other spendy gear takes priority. The point I’m trying to make is that the tool watch as we know it is today typically something big, chunky, robust, and borderline aggressive looking. The landscape for tool watches was completely different back in the 50s. If you were one of the American Navy’s Deep Freeze 1 task force and on your way to the South Pole back in 1955, the watch you would have been wearing is significantly different from the modern tool watch. That watch would have been the Nivada Grenchen Antarctic — a slim, art deco-inspired watch that was built tough, but not in the way you may think of it today. The Deep Freeze 1 task force’s mission was to establish a permanent base at the South Pole — one of the Earth’s most severe and ice-laden landscapes — and they needed to choose a timepiece that could withstand the conditions.
SaveSavedRemoved 0
Related Articles
Added to wishlistRemoved from wishlist 0
Added to wishlistRemoved from wishlist 0
Added to wishlistRemoved from wishlist 0
Added to wishlistRemoved from wishlist 0
We will be happy to hear your thoughts