Meridian — the time-only
- Calibre
- V.100 · manual
- Complication
- Hours, minutes
- Case
- Polished steel · 38 mm
- Power reserve
- 72 hours
Four watchmakers. One bench each. We build fewer than sixty mechanical watches a year, because a year is exactly how much time sixty watches take when nothing is hurried.
We did not set out to build a company. We set out to keep a craft from disappearing.
The world does not need another watch. It has enough. What it may still need is proof that a small object can hold a great deal of attention — that a bridge can be finished until it disappears into a mirror, that a spring can be shaped until it breathes.
So we set a ceiling and refused to move it. Sixty is not a marketing figure. It is the honest arithmetic of four people who will not delegate the finishing, will not outsource the movement, and will not sign a watch they did not touch.
Everything downstream of that decision — the waiting, the quiet, the price — follows from it. We think that is the only honest way to build.
Each is a study in one idea. We do not iterate for the sake of newness; we keep a reference until it is finished, and finished means it can no longer be improved by us.
The finest work in a Vollmer sits on the back of the movement, behind the case, hidden from everyone but the owner and the man who made it. We finish it anyway. That is the whole point.
Each bridge is worked against tin and diamond paste until it reflects a perfect black or a perfect white, depending only on the angle of the light. There is no shortcut. There is only time, pressure, and the patience to know when to stop.
Interior angles are cut by hand — the sharpest test in the craft, because a machine cannot reach into a corner and leave it clean. Every inward angle you find is a signature that no automated bench could forge.
The mainplate is grained in overlapping circles; the screws are blued in a small kiln until the exact shade of cornflower appears, then polished flat. None of it improves timekeeping. All of it improves the watch.
Before a movement leaves the bench it is regulated across six positions and two temperatures over a fortnight. We do not chase a number for a certificate. We chase a rate the owner will never have to think about.
No sales floor, no chief anything. A room in Glashütte with four benches, north light, and the sound of a single lathe. When you buy a Vollmer you are, quite literally, buying an object that passed through these four pairs of hands.
Trained in Glashütte, refused three larger houses. Builds every tourbillon cage himself.
The fastest hand and the slowest eye in the room. Every interior angle is hers.
Assembles and adjusts. Keeps a logbook on every watch he has ever timed.
Engraves the balance cock and hand-fills every dial. Signs nothing; you always know her work.
We will not pretend the wait is short, and we will not sell you a place you cannot reach. Here is exactly how it works, with nothing hidden.
A watch we made is a watch we look after — not for a decade, not for a warranty period, but for as long as it runs and as long as we exist.