Limited to only 500 pieces, this piece of engineering carries the weight of centuries—an heirloom of India’s forgotten maritime brilliance. Long before Europe perfected navigation, India was already a nation of voyagers. Our coastline—stretching over 7,500 km—was once alive with shipbuilders, astronomers, cartographers, and fearless sailors. From the Harappan port of Lothal, a marvel of ancient engineering with its precise dock design, tidal gates, and warehouse systems… to the Chola Navy, whose teakwood ships crossed the Indian Ocean and reached as far as Malaysia and Indonesia… to the Kalinga mariners, who established early sea trade routes across the Bay of Bengal… to the Gujarati dhows, crafted in Mandvi, that rode monsoon winds to East Africa and Arabia for over a thousand years… to the legendary Mappila and Konkani sailors, who mastered constellations long before compasses became widespread… to the pearl divers of the Gulf of Mannar, who descended into breathless blue silence in search of treasures…
India’s relationship with water is not myth—it is mastery.
Each of the 500 watches draws from this immense history.
Each number etched at the back is a marker of a story that began thousands of years ago. Crafted in Switzerland with the precision of modern horology, forged from high-pressure resistant titanium, and tested to survive 300 meters beneath the surface, this watch stands as a tribute to the explorers and engineers who shaped India’s maritime identity.