

In its 99th year, Tutima Glashütte has chosen to mark the occasion with two special editions of the Patria, each limited to just nine pieces and cased in solid 18-karat rose gold. The vehicle for this quiet statement is the new manufacture caliber Tutima 626, a manually wound movement whose architecture deliberately departs from convention. By setting aside the traditional three-quarter plate, long considered a defining hallmark of Glashütte horology, Tutima opens the movement to genuine scrutiny, granting the wearer an unobstructed view deep into an elaborately finished gear train. The 43-millimeter case, with its curved crown guard and domed sapphire crystal, frames this ambition with equal confidence. What the dial communicates, the movement confirms. Available in finely silver-plated or matte anthracite gray, the Patria presents proportions that are immediately legible and quietly authoritative. Gold hands polished by hand in the atelier, applied indices, and the historic brand seal compose a surface that rewards the kind of sustained attention fine watches are meant to invite. Through the sapphire caseback, the caliber 626 reveals minute, third, and seconds wheels finished with recessed mirror-polished surfaces and beveled spokes, two jewels set in screwed gold chatons, and a skeletonized balance cock exposing a free-sprung oscillation system with a hand-bent Breguet overcoil. Two distinct expressions complete the editions: one classically rendered in warm gold tones against a bright dial and brown strap, the other strikingly modern in anthracite and gold carried consistently from dial to movement. A 65-hour power reserve, indicated directly on the ratchet wheel, speaks to the engineering rigor beneath the surface. Each of the nine pieces in either version carries an engraved limitation number, a small notation that underscores what Tutima has always understood: that true rarity is earned through mastery.