The Ticking Point: A. Lange & Sӧhne’s Cabaret Tourbillon in ‘Honeygold’
In the first instalment of his new ‘Ticking Point’ column, watches writer Randy Lai espouses the virtue of a well-executed facelift.
The Ticking Point is our weekly briefing on the watches, watchmakers and industry developments shaping the conversation in contemporary horology. From significant new releases to the broader forces influencing collectors, it tracks what matters now—and what deserves a closer look.
Considering the historical link between this masthead and automotive marques in the strata of Rolls-Royce, it’s a wonder we’re not discussing A. Lange & Sӧhne every other minute.
The Saxon watchmaker par excellence has been a noted patron of classic automobiles for over a decade. In 2012, two years after the arrival of CEO Wilhelm Schmid, the brand began its support of the Concorso d’Eleganza Villa d’Este, going beyond the mere appearance of partnership to become suppliers of the ‘Best of Show’ award.
Schmid says Concorso-fied versions of classic Lange timepieces are conferred as “a token of our admiration for automotive works of art…and for the owners who take care of them”. Among collectors, they’re noted for their hunter-style casebacks—a historical reference in German watchmaking—engraved with the Este coat of arms.
This year, beyond the aforementioned ‘Best of show’ watch, Lange has utilised the Concorso to unveil its latest limited edition: the first time it has done so in 15 years of sponsorship. The release in question is the Cabaret Tourbillon Honeygold, an underrated choice next to more conventional Lange designs (e.g. the Lange 1 or 1815); made in the brand’s hardy blend of rose and white gold.
Watch collectors, especially the kind who habitually shell out hundreds of thousands of dollars, can be cynical about these kinds of aesthetic ‘changes’. At worst, the introduction of a new metal or dial combination can come off feeling perfunctory, which makes the current exercise, an integration of proprietary gold with the Cabaret’s rectilinear form, that much more satisfying.
The mechanics of this honeygold version are in keeping with other Cabarets from the last half-decade, yet the fine print is impressive enough to merit a brief revisit. Most notably, the movement powering the watch (L042.1) has been shaped to fit the rectangular Cabaret case. When the L042.1 debuted in the late 2000s, it was also the first movement (shaped or otherwise) to incorporate a ‘hacking’ tourbillon: an invaluable feature that resets this complication whenever the crown is pulled out, thereby guaranteeing precise time-setting.
Simultaneously, the cabaret tourbillon architecture is quintessentially Lange in both look and execution: sporting the three-quarter-plate layout of the brand’s round movements, replete with gold-studded chatons and silver bridgework. Corresponding in size to the container around it, the movement wears large and feels heavy-duty in hand — both positives when you consider the complexity of the tourbillon and uniformly lavish finishing.
Of course, the main allure of this Cabaret (and the reason we’re focusing on it for our inaugural instalment of ‘The Ticking Point’) is the dial. Lange’s watchmakers could have matched this exactly to the wider honeygold theme of the case. Fortunately, they opted to go a more thoughtful, visually dynamic route—one that (in typical Lange fashion) also demands added effort and attention to detail.
Unlike most Cabarets, in which the dial is produced using silver, the base of this watch is 18k honeygold engraved, then frosted, and finally plated with black rhodium. In the proverbial metal, the effect is of a charcoal dial, layered with the faintest shimmer of gold dust. Against this backdrop, relief elements like the Roman numerals or the aperture that frames the signature Lange ‘Big Date’ appear especially legible.
That sensation speaks to the Cabaret design’s potential for orderly, uncluttered beauty. It’s exciting to witness that, after a few years of relative obscurity, Lange is now evidently serious about seeing that potential fulfilled.
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