Left alone for seventy years, a silvered dress dial from the 1950s usually fades toward an even, biscuit cream. This one did the opposite. The silver surface of this Longines has scattered into a fine grey and charcoal speckle, a peppered, almost mineral texture that no factory ever printed and no honest restorer would try to fake. In our opinion it is the whole reason to reach for the watch, and the piece under all that character has the pedigree to match: a genuine vintage Longines automatic, reference 2264-1, powered by the brand’s in-house caliber 19A.
Longines has printed that winged hourglass on its dials since the late 1880s, when it registered the mark, and it still uses the emblem unchanged, among the oldest trademarks in watchmaking. It sits here just under twelve. Behind it stands a genuine manufacture: through the 1950s Longines still designed and built its own movements at Saint-Imier rather than buying them in, a distinction that carried weight then and carries more now that so few names can honestly claim it.
The automatic caliber behind the dial is the one collectors single out. Longines introduced the 19A in 1952 as the successor to its first automatic, the 22A, and built it around an eccentric winding system, the same broad idea behind the Pellaton automatics IWC was making in the same years, an efficient way of turning motion in either direction into wound mainspring. Ours is the 17-jewel version with the seconds set into a small register at six, and its finishing is the tell: the jewels sit in individual gold chatons screwed into the bridge, a level of care Longines did not owe a mid-range automatic and gave it anyway. The winding rotor is engraved LONGINES AUTOMATIC, and the bridge reads LONGINES WATCH CO SWISS, SEVENTEEN 17 JEWELS, and UNADJUSTED, with a serial that places assembly around 1955.
That last word, UNADJUSTED, is the thread that leads to the case and to who sold this watch. The 10k yellow gold filled snap back is worn smooth and honestly scratched on the outside, but the inside still reads cleanly: 2264-1 at the top, then LONGINES-WITTNAUER WATCH CO. INC., NEW YORK, GENEVA MONTREAL, and below the keystone hallmark, 10 K GOLD FILLED. For more than a century Longines reached American buyers through Longines-Wittnauer, its New York agent, and watches routed that way were usually cased on this side of the Atlantic with their movements marked unadjusted to sit lower in the American import tariff. None of that is a knock on the watch. It is the paper trail of a Swiss movement that crossed an ocean to be sold in New York, stamped straight into the metal. The case spans 35mm across and 41mm lug to lug on slim 18mm lugs, a true mid-century dress size, wearing the soft high-point wear to the gold fill we like to find on something worn for a working life rather than shelved.
Then back to the dial, because it is where the watch lives. The silver surface carries the speckling in full, heaviest through the center and thinning toward the chapter ring, with a few larger charcoal blooms that read as weather rather than damage. The printing under twelve is crisp and unretouched: LONGINES over the winged hourglass, Automatic in script below. Applied gold batons mark the hours, each fluted with fine parallel grooves that catch the light differently as the wrist turns, and slim gold hands sweep above them while the small seconds ticks in its sunk register at six. The evenness a refinished dial would show is exactly what this one lacks, and that is the compliment. We would not change a speck of it.
We have fitted it to a mud grey leather strap on an OTTUHR signed buckle, a flat, slightly cool grey that keeps the eye on the dial and lets the yellow of the case warm against it. The 18mm lugs take a standard strap, so it is an easy thing to change if a new owner reads the watch differently.
Serviced in-house at OTTUHR and backed by our 2-year mechanical warranty, it is ready for the wrist rather than the safe. For the collector who would rather own a watch that shows its years than one scrubbed back to looking like nothing happened, this is the vintage Longines automatic to hold out for. Small, honest, and beautifully aged. Time did the finishing on this one, and it did good work.
