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Pocket Watches

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Pocket Watches For Sale
Period: Early 20th Century
Period: 1910s
Elgin 14 Karat Gold and Diamond Pocket Watch
Located in Stamford, CT
This beautiful antique Elgin pocket watch circa 1895 is a true collectible. The hunting case has an inner dust cover and is set with a beaut...
Category

Early 1900s Antique Pocket Watches

18 Karat Yellow Gold Antique Breguet Paris Pocket Watch with Porcelain Dial
Located in Stamford, CT
18 Karat Yellow Gold Antique Breguet Paris Pocket Watch with Porcelain Dial. Second hand missing This watch does not work.
Category

1910s French Belle Époque Vintage Pocket Watches

L Aiglon Vintage Pocket Watch 14k Gold & Enamel Champange Dial Manual Wind
Located in London, GB
A unique 14k Yellow Gold and Enamel Vintage Pocket Watch, champagne dial with arabic numbers, small seconds at 6 0'clock, a fixed 14k yellow gold bezel, a 14k yellow gold case featur...
Category

Early 1900s Antique Pocket Watches

Materials

14k Gold

1900s Edwardian Illinois Railroad Pocket Watch
Located in Atlanta, GA
1900s Edwardian Illinois Railroad Stainless Steel Pocket Watch. A traditional railroad Illinois watch for collector's or users alike! The ...
Category

Early 20th Century Unknown Edwardian Pocket Watches

Materials

Stainless Steel

Antique and Vintage Pocket Watches for Sale on 1stDibs

Can you pull off a vintage pocket watch? Of course you can. With a suit and a waistcoat, a pocket watch can be a refreshing alternative to a wristwatch.

The earliest pocket watches were luxury items, and, owing to cost, they weren’t commonplace until the 19th century. Artfully crafted pocket watches were a symbol of wealth, and manufacturers such as Vacheron Constantin and Patek Philippe became known for theirs. (Today, they’re among the most sought after by collectors and enthusiasts.)

At the onset, pocket watches resembled small round table clocks, and pulling your small round table clock — perhaps of the silver variety — out of your breast pocket in front of someone else demonstrated unequivocally that you cared about punctuality. For collectors, pocket watches are big, and that means a larger canvas provided for functions without crowding the dial. For example, the Marius Lecoultre pocket watch — made circa 1890 — does everything but uncork your wine.

In the late 1800s, the open-face pocket watch became a staple on the American railroad. It was a requirement for railway workers to wear a pocket watch, as the timepieces were responsible for keeping conductors on schedule. This was a boon to the watchmaking industry, with companies like Hamilton, the Elgin National Watch Company and the Waltham Watch Company producing high-grade and workingman’s watches.

By the 1930s, wristwatches comprised the bulk of watch manufacturing in America, superseding the pocket watch. Suddenly, if you wanted to know the time, you merely glanced at your wrist. But given their vintage charm and our general appetite for good design, pocket watches are a piece of statement-making jewelry and today can prove complementary to your formal attire in a manner that is stylish and unconventional.

Let time take its course — browse a vast selection of antique and vintage pocket watches available on 1stDibs designed by legendary brands such as IWC, Cartier and more.

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