Tudor Glamour Double Date 42mm With Manufacture Movement
Tudor's elegant collection gets new mechanics and a revised design.
When the name Tudor is mentioned, models such as “Black Bay” or “Pelagos” spring to mind. For sure, the brand communicated (and created) a lot on these products – which are admittedly great watches. However, there are more watches in the collection than these sporty, vintage-inspired pieces – and that includes, for instance, the “Style“, the recently introduced “1926” or the Glamour – a watch that remained under the radar for us… Until now. Today, the brand unveils a redesigned and slightly more masculine version of this watch, now equipped with a brand new version of the manufacture movement. Meet the Tudor Glamour Double Date ref. 57100/57103.
Up until now, the Tudor Glamour had been entirely in the shadows of the BB, Pelagos and other sports models of Tudor. It was one of those watches that didn’t really capture our attention, mainly because the brand didn’t communicate about it. However, Tudor today introduces a new version, not only with an updated design and more refined dials, but mainly with the introduction of the manufacture calibre in this collection – and furthermore, a new evolution of the brand’s own movement.
The Tudor Glamour Double Date will be, as is often the case for the Rolex/Tudor Group, available in an array of versions. Steel on leather, steel on a bracelet, steel-and-gold on leather or on a two-tone bracelet, with or without diamonds on the dial… choices for all tastes. The main update concerns the case, which like its predecessor, the ref. 57000, still measures 42mm in diameter (a resolutely modern and masculine case) and has been slightly redesigned. According to Tudor “The double bezel has a slight drop creating a characteristic relief and gently extends the curves of the polished steel case.” Elegant but modern, dressy but usable in most conditions (WR to 100m).
The dial is also new, with new textures and new colour combinations. Alongside the classic black dial and the “very Rolex” Champagne/gold option, Tudor adds a nice silver dial with blue hands or silver dial with gold hands – certainly the most versatile version, even though the blue hands give the watch more casualness. Overall, the Tudor Glamour Double Date 42mm will be available in black with rhodium-plated or yellow gold-plated hour markers, champagne colour with yellow gold-plated hour markers, or opaline with blued indices, with or without diamonds.
Several textures have been applied to the dials: a central medallion with a gadroon pattern (vertical grooves), a peripheral ring with sunray finish and a snailed small seconds counter. The indices and hands are rather simple but decorated with several facets. The display comprises hours and minutes in the centre, small seconds at 6 o’clock and a double-date at 12 o’clock – the same display as the previous ref. 57000, but there is news “under the hood”.
The main novelty is the movement that powers this display. Based on the brand’s manufacture calibre, the new Calibre MT5641, again COSC-certified, relies on all the technologies seen on the BB or the Pelagos: transversal balance bridge, 70h power reserve, variable inertia balance with micro-adjustment by screws and non-magnetic silicon balance spring. The replacement of the second hand to 6 o’clock and the large date at 12 o’clock with two separated digits proves that this movement is modular and that we’ll certainly some more versions soon.
The updated Tudor Glamour Double Date 42mm with Manufacture Movement ref. 57100 /57103 is already visible on the brand’s website. Prices range from EUR 3,010 (steel on leather) and EUR 3,210 (steel on steel) to EUR 3,450 (steel-and-gold leather) and EUR 4,140 (steel-and-gold bracelet). Diamond dials require an extra EUR 690. More details on www.tudorwatch.com.
3 responses
I was looking at their ‘Style’ range the other day, and I have to say I liked the burgundy dial with fluted bezel.
I own a Tudor Prince, which I love and have come veery close to buying another Tudor model but they do tend to miss the mark on many of their models. The 1926 is….blah. Both it and the Style have that risible tiny date that screams of crappy design, the Black Bay 36 does not fit a 7.5″ wrist!, the North Flag is great….apart from that silly white date wheel…again and the stupid lugs.
Much of their inventory is….prissy, which is a great shame.
Available in any store
New watches make sense if you can not buy them.