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Golden Rose of Baden-Baden |
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When the quartz revolution of the 1970s changed the
industry forever, it took some time for designers,
and of course their employers, to recover from
an “everything is possible“ mentality
and return to their primary role, creating beauty
on the wrist. Longines designers succeeded brilliantly,
with Flore Marine (1970), Vagues (1970), Kleopatra
(1975) and Volubilis (1978) all winning a prestigious
German award, the Golden Rose of Baden-Baden.
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Design breakthroughs
In 1972, Paris-based French designer Serge Manzon
created specially for Longines a series of
solid silver watches. Even today, these avant-garde
designs remain a source of inspiration for
not a few watch manufacturers. One year later,
a Longines model called Prototype won the
coveted Prize of the City of Geneva award. |
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Technical advances
support aesthetic developments
By 1960 Longines set new records with the thinnest electromagnetic watch ever
made. Nineteen years later, in 1979, its Feuille d'Or models, fitted with caliber
L795, broke the two-millimeter thinness barrier to become the world's slimmest
watch, measuring an astonishing 1.98 mm from front to back. The secret: a quartz
movement totally integrated into the case.
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