The King is a watchaholic
The King is a watchaholic
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MXRod

Original Poster:

2,848 posts

168 months

Wednesday 14th September 2022
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I am always curious as to the brands of watches worn by people in the news , the royals are collectors of high end brands of time pieces , is seems the new King as well as the rest of the family are a serious collectors , worth a look .
In my dreams !

Barchettaman

7,060 posts

153 months

Wednesday 14th September 2022
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Yep, he’s got some amazing watches.

William only ever wears the quartz Omega SMP300 that was gifted to him by Diana, apparently.

matjk

1,112 posts

161 months

Thursday 15th September 2022
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Massive respect for William wearing that priceless SM while I’m sure RM or AP or Patek would happily give him whatever he wanted. I think it’s a great story

LaterLosers

953 posts

94 months

Thursday 15th September 2022
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I’d say most of Charles’s would be gifts I don’t quite see him popping down to WOS to put his name down on the list.

PT1984

3,108 posts

204 months

Thursday 15th September 2022
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matjk said:
Massive respect for William wearing that priceless SM while I’m sure RM or AP or Patek would happily give him whatever he wanted. I think it’s a great story
And this is exactly what a watch should be about.

Pupp

12,810 posts

293 months

Thursday 15th September 2022
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PT1984 said:
matjk said:
Massive respect for William wearing that priceless SM while I’m sure RM or AP or Patek would happily give him whatever he wanted. I think it’s a great story
And this is exactly what a watch should be about.
So, those unfortunate enough not to have family or friends bestowing expensive gifts shouldn’t get to enjoy nice watches? scratchchin

NDA

24,420 posts

246 months

Thursday 15th September 2022
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LaterLosers said:
I’d say most of Charles’s would be gifts I don’t quite see him popping down to WOS to put his name down on the list.
I believe he bought the Panerai on a ski trip.

Muzzer79

12,589 posts

208 months

Thursday 15th September 2022
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Pupp said:
PT1984 said:
matjk said:
Massive respect for William wearing that priceless SM while I’m sure RM or AP or Patek would happily give him whatever he wanted. I think it’s a great story
And this is exactly what a watch should be about.
So, those unfortunate enough not to have family or friends bestowing expensive gifts shouldn’t get to enjoy nice watches? scratchchin
It's not about it being a gift.

It's about the story attached to it.

Whether you buy yourself a £1000 TAG-Heuer or a £100,000 Patek Phillipe, or someone buys them for you, it's about how your journey got to that and the story behind it.

PT1984

3,108 posts

204 months

Thursday 15th September 2022
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Pupp said:
So, those unfortunate enough not to have family or friends bestowing expensive gifts shouldn’t get to enjoy nice watches? scratchchin
It’s a quartz Seamaster. Back when it was gifted i think these were £900. All things considered a very restrained choice.

I am not talking about Charles and his gifts.

I purchased my SMP Pro 300m 14 years ago now. £1900. I worked hard for it. It never leaves my wrist. The only time it will is to be passed to my first child, who is imminent.

I can’t imagine what that watch means to William.

That’s what I mean a watch should be. Something of sentiment. Not a show of wealth.

GCH

4,131 posts

223 months

Thursday 15th September 2022
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The Queen had more than a few high end watches. I do remember that at the Patek Philippe London exhibition in 2015, one of the models belonging to her was on loan, taking pride of place in a display with some other royal watches.
She also wore a JLC on her coronation day, and then JLC gifted her a white gold replica for her 2012 jubilee.

Also has been seen with Cartier (of course), Omega, AP,....but never Rolex. Class cool

anonymous-user

75 months

Thursday 15th September 2022
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PT1984 said:
Pupp said:
So, those unfortunate enough not to have family or friends bestowing expensive gifts shouldn’t get to enjoy nice watches? scratchchin
It’s a quartz Seamaster. Back when it was gifted i think these were £900. All things considered a very restrained choice.

I am not talking about Charles and his gifts.

I purchased my SMP Pro 300m 14 years ago now. £1900. I worked hard for it. It never leaves my wrist. The only time it will is to be passed to my first child, who is imminent.

I can’t imagine what that watch means to William.

That’s what I mean a watch should be. Something of sentiment. Not a show of wealth.
I doubt it cost that much
I have the exact same watch, under £1400 in 2011, a 50th birthday present from my wife.
Would never part with it (the watch wink), also it’s a lovely watch!, better finished than my more expensive Tudors etc
Being Quartz it’s always right too, a bonus as only worn on occasions..

944 Man

1,843 posts

153 months

Thursday 15th September 2022
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Can we say given instead of the cringe-worthy 'gifted', please? Gift is an adjective and not a verb, and we are not Americans (and 'American English' is not a real thing, it is just English, but wrong).

gregs656

12,022 posts

202 months

Thursday 15th September 2022
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944 Man said:
Can we say given instead of the cringe-worthy 'gifted', please? Gift is an adjective and not a verb, and we are not Americans (and 'American English' is not a real thing, it is just English, but wrong).
The word gifted is a century or so older than the USA.

944 Man

1,843 posts

153 months

Thursday 15th September 2022
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It is terrible English.

Barchettaman

7,060 posts

153 months

Thursday 15th September 2022
quotequote all
No it’s not, you may not like it but it is in common use and has been for hundreds of years.

It’s also specifically more informative; take the sentence "She gave me the book." Without getting more information, we don't know if the book was a gift or if she simply handed it to the speaker. But in "She gifted me the book" the meaning is instantly clear: the book was a gift.

Pistonheads, pedantry matters etc etc.

MarkJS

2,034 posts

168 months

Thursday 15th September 2022
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James6112 said:
PT1984 said:
Pupp said:
So, those unfortunate enough not to have family or friends bestowing expensive gifts shouldn’t get to enjoy nice watches? scratchchin
It’s a quartz Seamaster. Back when it was gifted i think these were £900. All things considered a very restrained choice.

I am not talking about Charles and his gifts.

I purchased my SMP Pro 300m 14 years ago now. £1900. I worked hard for it. It never leaves my wrist. The only time it will is to be passed to my first child, who is imminent.

I can’t imagine what that watch means to William.

That’s what I mean a watch should be. Something of sentiment. Not a show of wealth.
I doubt it cost that much
I have the exact same watch, under £1400 in 2011, a 50th birthday present from my wife.
Would never part with it (the watch wink), also it’s a lovely watch!, better finished than my more expensive Tudors etc
Being Quartz it’s always right too, a bonus as only worn on occasions..
I think you need to remember that William was less than 15 years old when it was bought for him. Even though it was under £1k, it was a very expensive watch to buy for a teenager. A great choice though - a modern classic.

944 Man

1,843 posts

153 months

Thursday 15th September 2022
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It is abysmal English.

Barchettaman

7,060 posts

153 months

Thursday 15th September 2022
quotequote all
944 Man said:
It is abysmal English.
No more abysmal than using ‘nighting out’ instead of ‘sleeping overnight in an HGV’.

All the best!

Macneil

1,054 posts

101 months

Thursday 15th September 2022
quotequote all
Barchettaman said:
No it’s not, you may not like it but it is in common use and has been for hundreds of years.

It’s also specifically more informative; take the sentence "She gave me the book." Without getting more information, we don't know if the book was a gift or if she simply handed it to the speaker. But in "She gifted me the book" the meaning is instantly clear: the book was a gift.

Pistonheads, pedantry matters etc etc.
"Gifted " may well be old but it's clumsy, a better turn of phrase in your example might be "the book was a gift from..."
Usages come and go, Shakespeare used "worser" and "Most unkindest" but we wouldn't use those phrases today.


iphonedyou

10,083 posts

178 months

Thursday 15th September 2022
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Barchettaman said:
No more abysmal than using ‘nighting out’ instead of ‘sleeping overnight in an HGV’.

All the best!
rofl

Now that's a tortured verb.

Nighting out. Jesus.