Go Unlimited with Magzter GOLD

Go Unlimited with Magzter GOLD

Get unlimited access to 10,000+ magazines, newspapers and Premium stories for just

$149.99
 
$74.99/Year

Try GOLD - Free

Towards the Horizon

WatchTime India

|

October - December 2025

A century after the first Zulu Time arrived, Longines continues to honour its role as timekeeper of the skies.

- by Digvijay

Towards the Horizon

We track this ascent, from the early Turkish Watches that set the brand on this path, to aviation instruments that aided precise timekeeping, to modern wristwatches that meld style and heritage.

—It was 1925, when Longines introduced the first dual-time zone wristwatch—Zulu Time. At a time when aviation was becoming popular with pilots setting records, Longines had taken the step to associate itself with Fédération Aéronautique Internationale (FAI) as the official timekeeper in 1919; by the beginning of WW II, Longines had timed no fewer than 34 record-setting flights. One such flight was the one that saw American pilot Charles Lindbergh fly nonstop from New York to Paris in 1927, eventually winning the Orteig Prize of USD25,000. Longines officially measured his flight time of 33 hours and 39 minutes from takeoff to landing.

It only made sense that in a time of flying across time zones, Longines would also develop dual-time zone watches. In 1925, the Swiss brand released the first ever dual-time zone wristwatch, the Zulu Time. Inspired by aviation, the dial of this historic model featured the colourful maritime flag, below 12 o'clock, representing the letter 'Z' which signified the time at the zero meridian in Greenwich, London, now known as Universal Time (UTC +0). In professional aviation, it is referred to simply as 'Zulu Time.' Presented in a four-digit format, it removes any ambiguity between AM and PM, allowing pilots and navigators to maintain precise and unambiguous communication during radio transmissions.

imageThe watch was housed in a square 34 mm x 24 mm case, typical of the Art Deco era, and was crafted from 18-karat white gold. The dial featured a 24-hour scale with a fourth central hand indicating the second time zone. The watch was powered by the hand-wound Longines Calibre 10.68N.

MORE STORIES FROM WatchTime India

WatchTime India

WatchTime India

Mark the Date

The Glashütte Original PanoMaticCalendar (Ref. 1-92-11-01-03-61) is housed in a 42 mm platinum case and features a matte-blue dial with vinyl decor, applied solid-gold indexes, and a month display with a sapphire element.

time to read

1 min

October - December 2025

WatchTime India

WatchTime India

Towards the Horizon

A century after the first Zulu Time arrived, Longines continues to honour its role as timekeeper of the skies.

time to read

6 mins

October - December 2025

WatchTime India

WatchTime India

Slim Pickings

The Piaget Altiplano Ultimate Automatic (Ref. G0A50126) is a landmark in ultra-thin watchmaking, measuring just 4.30 mm in total thickness, making it one of the slimmest self-winding mechanical watches ever created.

time to read

1 min

October - December 2025

WatchTime India

WatchTime India

Beach Day

Franck Muller continues its creative partnership with Tokyo-based streetwear label #FR2 with the launch of the #FR2NCK MULLER Vanguard Beach Limited Edition, available exclusively across the Asia Pacific.

time to read

1 min

October - December 2025

WatchTime India

WatchTime India

Royal Treatment

Tudor's new 28 mm Royal references come in two iterations: A full 316L stainless-steel model (Ref. m28320-0002) and a two-tone stainless-steel and yellow-gold variant (Ref. m28323-0002), both with a sunray blue dial.

time to read

1 min

October - December 2025

WatchTime India

WatchTime India

To the Moon and Back

— Longines's PrimaLuna collection gets a graceful overhaul featuring refined proportions, new complications, and elevated finishing in the PrimaLuna Moonphase.

time to read

1 min

October - December 2025

WatchTime India

WatchTime India

THE TRAVELLER

Nomos Glashütte's new slam dunk of a GMT watch, the Club Sport Neomatik Worldtimer

time to read

9 mins

October - December 2025

WatchTime India

WatchTime India

A LANDMARK MOMENT

With the introduction of its new Land-Dweller, Rolex made sure that both collectors and enthusiasts of mechanical watches would be able to tick all the boxes. We take a closer look at what undoubtedly can be described as the most important release from the leading Swiss watchmaker in years, and the new escapement that was introduced along with it.

time to read

7 mins

October - December 2025

WatchTime India

WatchTime India

Bold and Disruptive

ArtyA's watches meet at the intersection of art, innovation, and timekeeping. To understand its world of colour-changing cases, mirrored dials, and skeletonised movements, we talk to founder Yvan Arpa.

time to read

4 mins

October - December 2025

WatchTime India

WatchTime India

Good Times

The Vacheron Constantin Overseas Perpetual Calendar Ultra-Thin is housed in a 41. 5 mm case that is just 8.1 mm thick.

time to read

1 min

October - December 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size