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  Columns > Peter Speake-Marin > Golden Moments

   Published in: Issue II of 2006
 
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At the age of 19 I had the opportunity to study watchmaking at WOSTEP (Watchmakers of Switzerland Training and Educational Program) in Neuchâtel, Switzerland,. My motivation to extend my watchmaking training in Switzerland was fueled partly by an enthusiasm to further myself in horology and partly by the desire to meet as many European girls as possible. The latter aim was aided by the placement of myself and my 3 male Anglo colleagues in the only remaining section of a hostel which just happened to be directly connected to the girls dormitory. (Proof enough to me at that time that higher powers truly exists.)

In my subsequent maturity, the majority of cash I had accumulated in the United Kingdom to buy tools was gradually spent on more pressing purchases, such as beer. As I exhausted my tool funds, I increased proportionately the number of hours during the evenings and weekends spent working on the restoration projects which complemented the course work. It was during these hours that, I became engrossed in restoration.

Many of the watches being repaired by the students had been so badly abused and of so little financial value that they should have by all regards be declared officially dead. However, at the mercy of the students and through the guidance of the professor, these watches were brought back to life.

The quicker you were and the faster you progressed through the course, the more complicated and involved the repairs became.  The repairs which took initially the most time and mustered the least enthusiasm from my fellow students were usually wristwatches of low quality from the early part of the 20th century which had been worn away and which were not particularly well-made or well-designed in the first place. Repairing these required using virtually every technique we were currently learning, including making new balance staffs, balance springs, re-jeweling entire trains, and rebushing or rebuilding winding mechanisms.


During the evenings at my bench, working with some like-minded folk with the main lights off, workspaces illuminated by their individual lamps for added ambiance and the Swiss rock radio station on full volume, I found that I actually loved what I was doing. Some rare evenings I would walk back to the hostel with feelings of genuine elation. This remarkable sensation of satisfaction achieved by re-inventing missing components and executing them sympathetically in relation to function, material, style, and finish from a 150 year-old mechanism which was probably not worth more than $100.

These golden moments that I experienced at WOSTEP were responsible for perpetuating the direction that I have been following ever since. Watchmaking at its crudest level is about making products to perpetuate business; on its finest is about mechanical art in the pursuit of perfection. Working on the antiquities which create its history inspires and informs us, shows what can be done, as well as what should not be done with respect to longevity. Through the restoration of these pieces I discovered and learnt the character of their makers, their imagination, innovation, and occasionally, their sheer artistry.

The appreciation for what is original, hand-crafted, and beautiful is part of what makes us human- not unsimilar to the joy a 19 year-old feels when he is given direct access to the girl’s dormitory.  


Peter Speake-Marin is an independent watchmaker living in Rolle, Switzerland. He is a member of the AHCI and is known for his Piccadilly collection of watches. He is also known as a perfect gentleman. He is pictured at left with his son Fenton.

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Keywords

  • Watches
  • Independent Watchmakers
  • AHCI / Independent Watchmaking