Organizing your collection with a watch display
Organizing your collection with a watch display
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Louis400

Original Poster:

1 posts

Hi everyone,

I’ve recently started collecting a few watches and I’m trying to figure out the best way to keep them organized and visible. I came across the idea of using a watch display, and it seems like a practical solution to both protect the watches and show them off nicely.

I’m curious to know how other collectors here store or display their watches. Do you prefer dedicated display cases, rotating watch winders, or more DIY setups? Any tips or photos would be greatly appreciated!

Thanks

Sporky

10,404 posts

87 months

I have one of these after a recommendation in the G-Shock thread - also available as a 24-slot. It is much, much nicer than the price suggests.

https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B07QDYQJNW

flasher

9,289 posts

307 months

I've got a 11 watch winder display case, similar to this. Sits nicely in the man cave.




NDA

24,754 posts

248 months

It might depend on the value, if you have £100k worth of watches, you might not want them on display and portable.

Mine are all in the safe, tucked away.

Harris_I

3,300 posts

282 months

Rothwell 6 slot with drawer:

https://www.rothwellsf.com/collections/6-slot/prod...

Does the job for the price. Positioned in-between the high end stuff like Wolf and the AliExpress Chinese products like Songmics.

There's much online debate about winders vs static storage. Personally I'm not keen on a winder providing I keep rotating my watches (by which I mean changing them daily!).

NDA

24,754 posts

248 months

Harris_I said:
There's much online debate about winders vs static storage. Personally I'm not keen on a winder providing I keep rotating my watches (by which I mean changing them daily!).
Yep. I am a bit on the fence. If you have a perpetual calendar movement, then 100% have one. I have an annual calendar which is very easy to set.

The problem with winders is that you're basically presenting your watches in a nice display for a burglar, so I used to use winders but not any more.

Harris_I

3,300 posts

282 months

Yes, I can imagine a perpetual calendar would be an absolute pain to set!

Some suggest the other issue with a winder is it decreases the period between servicing since the watch is continually running, rather than (say) once a week. Plus it doesn't actually help with manual wind and quartz watches.

Another minor point was that when I had a winder running continously, it made a quiet humming sound which annoyed me a bit, especially at night.

Flying machine

1,239 posts

199 months

Harris_I said:
Yes, I can imagine a perpetual calendar would be an absolute pain to set!

Some suggest the other issue with a winder is it decreases the period between servicing since the watch is continually running, rather than (say) once a week. Plus it doesn't actually help with manual wind and quartz watches.

Another minor point was that when I had a winder running continously, it made a quiet humming sound which annoyed me a bit, especially at night.
I agree with the noise that some winders make - I had a freebie with a watch that.I bought from Chisholm Hunter (curiously, a hand wound Grand Seiko!) and don't use it for that reason. Barrington winders are slightly quieter I think.

I used to have three watches on winders, but in a safe, now I don't bother keeping them running and just set the watch when I want to wear it (including an annual calendar - if I can be bothered). That said, most of my watches are hand wound. It's a shame that these sorts of things need to be locked away, but it's obviously sensible,

My perpetual has a 7 day chronometric power reserve, so I just wind it once a week when I wind various clocks about the house - job jobbed!

bigandclever

14,207 posts

261 months

When did Lidl tea boxes go out of vogue? smile