Complete Price Guide to Watches

Complete Price Guide to Watches
Author: Tom Engle
Publisher: Tinderbox
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2007
Genre: Clocks and watches
ISBN: 9781574325539

Complete Price Guide to Watches is the most reliable and convenient guide available. This annual book is a miniature encyclopedia with over 1,200 pages, over 10,350 watches listed with current values, and more than 7,850 illustrations. American and European pocket watches, wrist watches, and even comic character watches fill this comprehensive guide. It also includes tips for collectors and historical information, as well as guidelines for grading and appraising watches. There are thousands of price changes, and once again a handy index that appeared for the first time in the 2006 edition. With this handy pocket reference, collectors can make on-the-spot judgments about identification, age, quality, and value. Complete Price Guide to Watches has become the professional standard for watch collectors and dealers. 2007 values.

Pocket Watches

Pocket Watches
Author: Alan Shenton
Publisher: ACC Distribution
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1995
Genre: Clocks and watches
ISBN: 9781851492114

Alan Shenton was a highly experienced and respected horologist with an immense knowledge of the

American Watches

American Watches
Author: Roy Ehrhardt
Publisher:
Total Pages: 246
Release: 1987-01-01
Genre: Antiques & Collectibles
ISBN: 9780913902530

American Watchmaking

American Watchmaking
Author: Michael C. Harrold
Publisher: Nawcc
Total Pages: 144
Release: 2017-04
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 9781944018030

This overview of American watchmaking covers both the history of the industry and the history of American watch innovations during their heyday. Appendices include a list of American watch companies, with brief timelines, and a serial number chart. This is a must have for anyone with an interest in American watches.

The New Collector's Guide to Pocket Watches

The New Collector's Guide to Pocket Watches
Author: Barry Goldberg
Publisher:
Total Pages: 50
Release: 2017-09-28
Genre:
ISBN: 9781549853180

As with any specialized field, pocket watch collecting has its own terminology, and it is not always easy for the novice collector to understand what the "experts" are talking about. What does it mean to say that a watch has "jewels" or that it is "adjusted"? What is a "hunter case" watch? What's the difference between a railroad "grade" watch and a railroad "approved" watch? What is a "lever set" watch? Isn't "rolled gold" a brand of pretzel? Etc., etc., etc.This booklet is full of all the things I wish somebody had told me when I first started collecting, and which I have shared with many new collectors over the years. Keep in mind that I have tried to keep things as simple and basic as possible for quick and easy comprehension, which necessarily means that this is not a scholarly treatise. But hopefully this will give you enough information to get you started and also give you a clue what those "other" books are talking about.

Collector's Encyclopedia of Pendant and Pocket Watches, 1500-1950

Collector's Encyclopedia of Pendant and Pocket Watches, 1500-1950
Author: Jeanenne Bell
Publisher:
Total Pages: 365
Release: 2004
Genre: Antiques & Collectibles
ISBN: 9781574323955

Whether you simply find watches fascinating or you have an old watch that you are curious about, this book is the one for you. This exploration of the evolution of the pendant/pocket watch is divided into centuries. Each century explores what was happening in the world and how these events and fashions influenced watch making. It includes information on makers, their marks, and even the serial numbers for the American watch movements. Filled with clues, it will help you determine when a watch was made, how it was made, what it is made of, and what makes it tick. The amount of photographs of timepieces in this volume is impressive - hundreds of watches are featured in beautiful color photographs. Cases, dials, and movements are included in the photographs - this book encompasses the entire watch. 2004 values.

Wristwatch Handbook The

Wristwatch Handbook The
Author: R. Schmidt
Publisher: Antique Collector's Club
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2016-10-12
Genre: Wrist watches
ISBN: 9781851498291

'The Wristwatch Handbook' provides the reader with a comprehensive anatomy of the mechanical wristwatch; every conceivable function and form. It is the foundational text for the novice and the reference book for the seasoned enthusiast. Where other books about watches focus on advising the collector, on a single brand, or on a timeline of key historical figures and events, 'The Wristwatch Handbook' takes a detailed look at mechanical wristwatch complications (functions) and leaves no stone unturned. The reader will gain the ability to identify a complicated watch from twenty paces and perform a top-to-bottom assessment of even the most exotic timepiece in a matter of seconds. Despite the functional obsolescence of the mechanical wristwatch (our phones, computers, even microwaves tell more accurate time), there are more varieties of mechanical watches available than ever before. Today, innovation is no longer exclusively preoccupied with accuracy; pioneer manufacturers are also exploring friction reduction, anti-magnetism, scratch resistance, dial decoration, exotic materials and so on.

The American Pocket Watch

The American Pocket Watch
Author: Christopher S. Barrow
Publisher: Robert Hale
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2014
Genre: Pocket watches
ISBN: 9780719810411

From a pocket watch expert, a guide specifically on the intricacies of American models Many people have inherited an American pocket watch that sits gathering dust in a drawer, but they often only need a really good cleaning and some minor repairs to get them working again. Now this concise and beautifully illustrated step-by-step guide to the intricacies of American models will allow the enthusiastic amateur to rescue an old watch and perhaps pass it on to the next generation in full working order. American machine-made pocket watches first appeared in the 1850s and were so well-made that by the 1890s they had come to dominate the international watch market. The secret of their success was the range of standard sizes and readily interchangeable parts, plus the facility to be easily customized to suit the pocket (pun intended) of every purchaser, so that the man who could only afford the nickel case could be as confident as the wealthy one who chose the solid gold case that his timepiece was accurate and reliable. These very popular watches sold in their millions and have stood the test of time (pun also intended) so that they are still readily available.