
Vintage Rolex Daytona ref. 6265
And so what I want to discuss here will be foreign to you. Perhaps unbelievable. Incredible in the truest sense of the word – not to be credited as fact.
But my friends, it's true. They walk among us.
Men with only one watch. Guys who have only ever had one watch. To them, it's a tool. And I don't mean a diving tool, or a mountain climbing tool, or any other adventuring/ extreme-working-conditions tool. I mean simply a tool to know what time it is.
If you ever run across them, they're often older. “Gentlemen of a certain age,” as it were. And the watch is as likely to be an authentic Rolex as it is anything else.
I met a guy at a flea market in rural Minnesota once. He was wearing a GMT-Master II – the one they call the Coke. Probably a ref. 16760. I stopped him and admired the piece. He was a little dubious at my interest, but I assured him my interest was genuine – being a watch writer. So he said he'd bought it in the 1980s and had worn it ever since. No big deal, and no, he didn't own any other watches. Why would he? He just didn't need another one.

Rolex GMT-Master II ref. 16760

Rolex Submariner 16610
And finally, I was teaching a fly fishing last spring class with an old college professor of mine. I noticed he was wearing an Explorer 1016, so I asked him about it. He bought it new in the 1980s and it was his daily wear. He liked it because of the simple black dial and unassuming size of the case. He said he thought it didn't “look like a Rolex.” He meant it didn't attract too much attention, possibly from the wrong element.

Vintage Rolex Explorer 1016
But remember… they're out there. If you see one, talk to him about his watch. And get ready to hear a tale. vedere di piu rolex imitazioni e Hermes H-our
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