An unfinished Vollmer calibre on the bench

Glashütte · Est. 1998 · Four hands

Sixty a year, and not one more.

Four watchmakers. One bench each. A movement leaves this workshop only when the last of us would keep it. Sixty is not a target — it is the number a single pair of hands can finish without hurrying.

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Why Vollmer exists

We refused to grow, so that nothing would be lost.

Vollmer began when Anselm Vollmer left a large manufacture in the valley and took two benches into a former schoolhouse on the edge of town. He had watched good movements pass through too many hands to be anyone's work.

Here, one watchmaker follows a single watch from raw plate to final regulation. The bridges they anglage are the bridges they will see through the caseback. There is no line, no target, no investor asking for more.

What that costs us in scale, it returns in the only currency we keep: a watch that was made, entirely, by someone whose name you can learn.

4
Watchmakers
≤60
Watches / year
1998
First calibre
The collection

Four references.
Nothing between them.

Each is built to order. Prices are in euro, before local duty. Waiting time begins the day your deposit clears.

01 Vollmer Referenz Eins
Time only

Referenz Eins

The watch we would keep if we could keep only one. Three hands, small seconds, a dial finished in frosted German silver. Everything decorative has already been removed.

Calibre
V.10 manual
Complication
Small seconds
Case
Steel, 38.5mm
Power reserve
62 hours
Waiting time
26 months
Reference
V-01
€ 38,400List opens quarterly
02 Vollmer Referenz Zwei
Power reserve

Referenz Zwei

A running display of the mainspring's remaining will, arced across the left of the dial. The seconds sit opposite. Wind it on a Monday and it forgives a forgetful weekend.

Calibre
V.14 manual
Complication
Power reserve
Case
White gold, 39mm
Power reserve
72 hours
Waiting time
34 months
Reference
V-02
€ 61,900Gold only
03 Vollmer Referenz Drei
Moon phase

Referenz Drei

A single hand-engraved moon crosses a lacquered night sky, accurate to a day's drift over 122 years. The one romance we allow ourselves, kept in proportion.

Calibre
V.21 manual
Complication
Moon phase
Case
Rose gold, 39.5mm
Power reserve
65 hours
Waiting time
41 months
Reference
V-03
€ 74,500Engraved to order
04 Vollmer Referenz Vier
Tourbillon

Referenz Vier

The whole workshop touches this one. A flying tourbillon under a black-polished bridge, visible through the dial. We make no more than six a year, and some years fewer.

Calibre
V.30 manual
Complication
Flying tourbillon
Case
Platinum, 40mm
Power reserve
80 hours
Waiting time
58 months
Reference
V-04
€ 214,000Six per year, at most
A black-polished bridge under the loupe

The movement

What no one will ever see, finished as if everyone will.

The caseback is sapphire, but most of our finishing lives where light rarely reaches. We do it anyway. It is the only part of the craft that answers to conscience alone.

Hand-bevelled bridgesEvery edge chamfered and polished by hand, inward angles included — the mark no machine can leave.
Black polishSteel worked flat against tin until it reads pure black or pure white as the wrist turns. Days per part.
Frosted German silverPlates left uncoated, to age warmly with the years rather than stay artificially bright.
Screwed gold chatonsJewels set in gold, held by blued screws — a way older, and slower, than pressing them in.
The workshop

Four people, and every one on the caseback.

There is no floor, no department, no "the team." There are four benches under the same north light. When you own a Vollmer, you own the work of a person you could sit beside.

Anselm Vollmer

Anselm Vollmer

Founder · Regulation

Left the valley in 1998. Regulates every movement himself before it is cased.

Marit Køhler

Marit Køhler

Finishing · Anglage

Trained in Le Locle. Her bevels are the reason we photograph in raking light.

Jonas Reinholt

Jonas Reinholt

Complications · Tourbillon

Builds every Referenz Vier cage. Once spent a week on a single black-polished cock.

Hedda Vollmer

Hedda Vollmer

Engraving · Moons

Anselm's daughter. Every moon on a Referenz Drei is cut by her hand.

The waiting list, honestly

We will not pretend the wait is short.

The list is not a marketing device. It is arithmetic: four hands, sixty watches, and a decision to never make sixty-one. Here is exactly how it works.

1

You write to us

No configurator, no cart. A conversation about which reference is right, and whether you are content to wait years for it.

2

You take a place

A deposit of twenty percent secures your position. Your waiting time begins the day it clears, not before.

3

We assign a maker

One watchmaker takes your watch from plate to regulation. You will know their name, and may visit the bench.

4

You collect in person

When it is right and not a day sooner. We would rather return your deposit than deliver something we would not keep.

The Vollmer workshop, Glashütte

Make contact

Tell us what you are willing to wait for.

The list opens each quarter and closes when it is full. Write to us, and we will reply — from one of four benches, by one of four names.

Workshop
Altenbergerstraße 12
01768 Glashütte, Saxony
By appointment