MILANESE MOMENT: Time stops for nobody, and particularly not Jaeger-LeCoultre, which has decamped to Milan’s Salone del Cell shortly after exhibiting at Watches and Wonders in Geneva.
Whereas the model’s Geneva present was all about watches, this one is about clocks, and particularly the Atmos, which launched in 1928, and is designed to tick for not less than 1,000 years resulting from an energy-efficient, self-winding mechanism that’s powered by small adjustments in air temperature and strain.
“Residing on Air,” Jaeger-LeCoultre’s first main present on the Salone, opened this week and runs till Sunday at Villa Mozart.

Jérôme Lambert, CEO of Jaeger-LeCoultre.
The present options 19 Atmos clocks that span greater than 9 many years.
There are additionally archival supplies and technical drawings, and a watchmaker on website demonstrating how the revolutionary air mechanism works. A brand new limited-edition Atmos referred to as Infinite Halo can also be a part of the present.
Guests will be capable to see how thermal power is remodeled into mechanical power to energy the motion. The clock comprises a hermetically sealed, gas-filled capsule, which is related to the drive spring by a membrane.
In response to the model, the slightest temperature variation adjustments the amount of the fuel, inflicting the membrane to increase and contract — and wind the spring.
Within the Nineteen Seventies, Jaeger-LeCoultre started collaborating with main designers and craftspeople to reinterpret the Atmos. A few of these designs are on show, together with the sequence Atmos fashions created by Marc Newson as a part of a longstanding collaboration that started in 2008.
Newson’s fashions on show embrace Atmos 561, Atmos 566 and Atmos Designer 568.

The makings of the Atmos clock.
Jérôme Lambert, Jaeger-LeCoultre’s chief govt officer, mentioned in an interview that it was necessary for the model to be current on the Salone.
“We switched off Geneva, and we switched on Milano,” mentioned Lambert, including that Jaeger-LeCoultre traveled to Italy “to showcase the way forward for high quality watchmaking by one other angle.
“This clock was invented in 1928 and remains to be utterly distinctive. We’ve had essentially the most superb creators in world reinvent it,” he added.
In the identical interview, Lambert recalled giving Queen Elizabeth II the particular Millennial Atmos for her Diamond Jubilee in 2012.
“She was the one one who ever requested me, ‘What’s going to you do in 1,000 years’ time when the dial is [obsolete]?’” mentioned Lambert, who admitted through the interview that he actually didn’t have a comeback to the query, however he understood the place she was coming from.
“I suppose that in case you’re a part of a monarchy with a really lengthy historical past, you’re all the time projecting into the far future,” he added.

