Garrett Silverstein 0 26 Jun 2025 July 22, 2025 Rolex Oyster 4070 A manually-wound model from the mid-1940s often branded as "Oyster Royal." Its significance lies in Rolex's strategy of creating a bran... Continue reading
Garrett Silverstein 0 26 Jun 2025 July 21, 2025 Rolex Oyster 3270 A manually-wound Oyster model from the late 1930s, housed in a "cushion" or "tonneau" shaped case. Its historical significance lies in ... Continue reading
Garrett Silverstein 0 26 Jun 2025 July 21, 2025 Rolex Oyster 3351 A manually-wound, cushion-cased Oyster from the late 1930s/early 1940s. Its primary historical significance comes from examples co-bran... Continue reading
Garrett Silverstein 0 26 Jun 2025 July 21, 2025 Rolex Oyster 3359 A manually-wound model from the late 1930s/early 1940s, this reference is significant for its association with both the "Oyster Army" a... Continue reading
Garrett Silverstein 0 26 Jun 2025 July 20, 2025 Rolex Prince 3059 A rectangular, manually-wound dress watch from the 1930s, highly significant as part of the prestigious "Prince" family. Known as the "... Continue reading
Garrett Silverstein 0 26 Jun 2025 July 22, 2025 Rolex Oyster 3136 A manually-wound model from the late 1930s/early 1940s often branded "Oyster Raleigh." Its significance is twofold: it was part of a st... Continue reading
Garrett Silverstein 0 26 Jun 2025 July 21, 2025 Rolex Oyster 4219 A manually-wound model from the 1940s, significant for being a stylistic precursor to the "Air-King" line. It embodies the design ethos... Continue reading
Garrett Silverstein 0 26 Jun 2025 July 22, 2025 Rolex Oyster Speedking 4220 A manually-wound "boy's size" model from the 1940s. Its significance lies in Rolex's strategy of market segmentation. The "Speedking" l... Continue reading
Garrett Silverstein 0 26 Jun 2025 July 21, 2025 Rolex Oyster 4125 Known as the "King-of-Wings," this manually-wound WWII-era model is historically significant as part of Rolex's "Air" series honoring R... Continue reading
Garrett Silverstein 0 26 Jun 2025 July 21, 2025 Rolex Oyster 3121 A manually-wound "boy's size" Oyster from the late 1930s/early 1940s, often seen with "Royal" or "Firefly" branding. Its historical sig... Continue reading