Friday, April 30, 2010

Frederique Constant in the top 30 of the Swiss Watch Industry

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According to the swiss magazin Bilanz, Frederique Constant is in the Top 30 of the biggest Companies of the Swiss watch Industry. Who of you knew that?[[MORE]]


Live your passion



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Thursday, April 29, 2010

Sébastien Schneiter - Frederique Constant Junior Ambassador - getting ready for the Youth Olympic Game

b1141049d54073ba184With the Youth Olympic tickets now in Sébastien Schneiter’s hands, a new phase of training has started which will involve both training session at the club as well as at the Swiss Sailing team levels. It will be an intensive three month in order to be ready for the Olympic games. The key events during that period will be Byte CII as well as the Laser 4.7 European Championship which will both take place in July.[[MORE]] In addition there will be the Nationals title events as well as several Swiss Sailing/Olympics training sessions. In August the Swiss Olympic teams will be heading to Singapore where they will be arriving there a week before the event itself to start training before the officials regattas.

Below are the various events in preparation for the Youth Olympic Games:

- 1-2 May: championnat suisse par point (Lugano), Laser 4.7.
- 7-8 May: championnat suisse par point (Thun), Laser 4.7.
- 28-30 May: Lago di Garda clinic, Byte
- 12-13 june, CM Fos sur Mer, Laser 4.7
- 25-30 June: lago di garda training, Byte.
- 1-4 July: European Byte, Lago di Garda.
- 8-11 July: Swiss Nationals, Laser 4.7
- 21-24 July: Hourtin Training, Laser 4.7
- 25-31 July: Laser 4.7 European championship, Hourtin
- 7-14 August: Byte training, Singapore.
- 15-26 August: Youth Olympic Games

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Frederique Constant will host a press conference in London

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On May 6th, Frederique Constant will host a press conference in London. This event will mark the official re-launch of the brand in the UK. At the same time, CEO Peter Stas will present our Basel 2010 Novelties to the British press.

[[MORE]]Location: the exclusive Atelier de Joel Robuchon.

Check it out: www.joel-robuchon.com

Monday, April 12, 2010

Frederique Constant pays tribute to the famous pianist Frédéric Chopin

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Geneva, March 2010
Frédérique Constant is proud to announce the launch of its Limited Edition F. Chopin 2010 in celebration of the 200th birth anniversary of Frédéric Chopin. [[MORE]]These comme-morative timepieces are produced in a limited edition of 1810 pieces in steel and in Yellow gold plated and feature an ultra classical dial with a ‘piano keys’ pattern in the centre. Each watch is delivered in a miniature Frédéric Chopin Piano.

Short Biography
Frédéric-François Chopin (March 1, 1810 – October 17, 1849) is widely seen as one of the greatest of Polish composers renowned for his piano works. A great Romantic composer, who nevertheless wrote absolute music with formal titles such as Mazurkas, Impromptus, Walzes, Nocturnes. He was another one of the extremely rare child prodigies. The musical talent of young Chopin became apparent early on. At the age of 7, he was already the author of two polonaises (in G minor and B-flat major), the first being published in the engraving workshop of Father Cybulski. The prodigy was featured in the Warsaw newspapers, and 'little Chopin' became the attraction at receptions given in the aristocratic salons of the capital. He also began giving public charity concerts. His first professional piano lessons lasted from 1816 to 1822, when the teacher was no longer able to give any more help to the pupil whose skills surpassed his own.

Chopin's music for the piano combined a unique rhythmic sense (particularly his use of rubato, chromatic inflections, and the style of Johann Sebastian Bach), as well as a piano technique, which was of his own creation. This mixture produced a particularly fragile sound in the melody and the harmony, which are nonetheless underpinned by solid and interesting harmonic techniques. He took the new salon genre of the nocturne, invented by Irish composer John Field, to a deeper level of sophistication, and endowed popular dance forms, such as the Polish mazurka and the Viennese waltz with a greater range of melody and expression.
Chopin in 2010
In Poland, the year of 2010 is announced as the "Year of Fryderyk Chopin" as it is Chopin’s 200th birthday anniversary. Hundreds of events are planned, not only in Poland, however all over the world - concerts, exhibitions, meetings, festivals, congresses and others. Activities are actively coordinated and controlled The Fryderyk Chopin Institute, which was established in 2001 on the basis of an act of the Polish Parliament, to organise concerts, conferences, course, as well as to cover research and popularisation of knowledge about Chopin’s life and work, and cooperation with institutions and organizations dealing in the protection of the Chopin heritage. The Fryderyk Chopin Institute has officially licensed the Frédérique Constant Limited Edition F. Chopin.

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Live your Passion

Sunday, April 11, 2010

For those who missed it: Beating Hearts - Cover article in International Wristwatch

Beating Hearts

Watchmakers used to be the only individuals lucky enough to see what makes mechanical timepieces tick. Sure there were clocks and the occasional decorated pocket watches with engraved bridges that could be admired when one opened the back of a specially made case. But as a rule, prior to the advent of the mechanical renaissance of the 1980s and 1990s, few collectors could readily observe the mysterious source of a wrist-borne timepiece’s characteristic tick.
But in 1994, when Geneva-based watch firm Frédérique Constant punched a big hole in the dial of one of its watches, exposing the rapidly moving balance wheel, the industry had a big “aha” moment.
It had been just a decade earlier that several small brands began to open up their case backs to expose one side of a mechanical movement. When Peter Stas, who with his wife Aletta founded Frédérique Constant in 1988, opened the dial on the brand’s Heart Beat collection, he also opened the floodgates for a host of imitators.

[[MORE]]
“The purpose of the Heart Beat development was to show the mechanical nature of our watches,” he notes. “We considered it important to highlight the difference between mechanical and quartz watches visually.”
That open dial, which essentially said “we’re not quartz,” became the brand’s iconic design for many years. However, due to what Stas calls a “beginner’s mistake” the look was not trademarked.
“In 1994, Frédérique Constant as a company was growing fast but was still relatively small,” he says. “Without an internal legal department and sufficient management attention, a beginner’s mistake was made: The Heart Beat feature should have been deposited as a design registration. Possibly, a patent could have been secured.” While watches with open dials began appearing within a year from all corners of the industry, Frédérique Constant has since expanded its identity well beyond the Heart Beat.
Today, with several in-house manufactured calibers (including a tourbillon), a wide-ranging selection of men’s and ladies’ styles and with production of more than 100,000 pieces from its facility in Geneva, the company continues to expand.
“We have been growing consistently, twenty percent to thirty-five percent since the early 1990s,” he noted in a letter this spring. “Even during the 9/11 and Dotcom crises in 2001-2003, our sales continued to grow over twenty-percent annually.”
In the United States, Stas recently appointed Ralph Simons to direct the brand’s new Florida-based distribution office, hiring three sales representatives and re-invigorating the brand’s marketing and publicity. Simons looks to make available both Frédérique Constant and the firm’s sportier sister brand Alpina in about one hundred retail stores this year, though not all stores will necessarily carry both brands.

Manufactured value
The domestic expansion of Frédérique Constant could not have come at a more opportune period, judging by reactions seen at the recent BaselWorld watch fair. There, collectors and retailers searched for “value-oriented” brands and even value-focused individual collections.
“Frédérique Constant has always produced classical timepieces with an excellent price-value ratio,” asserts Stas. “That is why we call ourselves the ‘first choice in accessible luxury.’”
He backs this up by noting his firm offers automatic mechanical pieces that are Swiss made for less than $1,000. What’s more, the company sells several models fitted with one of the firm’s own in-house calibers for less than $2,550.
“Our watches are perfect for the beginning watch enthusiast with a reasonable budget,” he explains. “On the other hand we clearly see that our high-end manufacture pieces up to the tourbillon with our in-house caliber are bought to complete the collections of watch aficionados.”
This year, Frédérique Constant expanded its roster of in house models with the Maxime Manufacture Automatic, a classic-looking piece that features the new Calibre FC-700, made by the firm in Geneva. One version of this new collection can be seen on the cover of this issue.
With expanding, though still naturally limited, movement production in Geneva (the firm made about 5,000 in-house calibers in 2008) Stas hopes to slowly add more proprietary models to the firm’s mix, which still relies on proven calibers from ETA and Sellita.
“We expect sales of our in-house timepieces to grow from 5,000 to 12,000 pieces in coming years,” he adds. “Our latest introduction in Basel, the Maxime Manufacture Automatic, forms a great example of the direction that we want to continue for our top-of-the-line: classical yet contemporary, high-end pieces with a recognizable design and a sensible price ($2,550 for the Maxime pictured on this month’s cover.)’”
That new model’s essentially traditional profile represents the brand’s design philosophy quite well, Stas notes.
“We specialize in classical watches. This is what we liked when we established the brand and what the brand is recognized for. It has always been important for us to keep this consistency,” he says. “In past years, many brands changed to more sporty looking watches. We disagreed and stayed with the classical look.” Stas feels that in today’s economic climate classical watches will be even more important.
Should a consumer desire a sportier edition from the firm, Stas generally directs him or her to the firm’s other brand, Alpina, which is designed for those in search of bolder statements. (However, the Frédérique Constant Healey chronographs, which the firm designs as part of its sponsorship of the Healey Challenges in Le Mans and Heidelberg and Canada, might also meet such criteria.)

Technical flourishes
For those who seek their classic designs with in-house touches, Frédérique Constant offers technical flourishes rarely found elsewhere. Though initially a window to the soul of an ETA caliber movement (and, eventually, several complications made with the assistance of Dubois-Dépraz and Agenhor Genève), the firm’s Heart Beat models received the premiere in-house addition in 2004 with FC-910, the company’s first manufactured movement.  In that original manual-wind caliber, the company underscored its focus on the mechanical nature of its watches by moving the large balance wheel closer to the dial to make it all the more visible to the wearer. With the assistance of horology schools and Geneva-based engineers, the firm developed that caliber with its balance wheel bridge up front rather than in back, as was the tradition. This allowed the firm to then move the wheel itself and the fine regulation toward the dial side–a new design that the company was, this time, sure to register.  The FC-910 was followed by in-house designs made with a moonphase and date and in 2006 by the firm’s first automatic edition, which added an extra-large and gold-plated rotor for unusually efficient winding power. Despite its larger size, the rotor featured a large opening to allow a clear view of the caliber beneath the clear sapphire caseback.
When Frédérique Constant began to include silicon escapements in a small number of Heart Beat manufactured movements in 2007, it trumped itself the following year when the silicon escape wheel also appeared in the firm’s premier in-house tourbillon, which the company (and its CNC machine in Geneva) has produced since last year. Each of the 188 limited-edition tourbillon red gold models and 88 white gold models is individually numbered, and priced at about $50,000.

Newest models
In addition to the above-noted models and its varied ongoing collections, which include a wide range of collections for men and women, Frédérique Constant this year includes a collection that celebrates a new collaboration with the Helice Classique, an annual boating event held on Lake Geneva honoring classic Runabout yachts of the 1920s.
The partner here, as with the classic Healey automobiles, reflects Frédérique Constant’s own ideas regarding contemporary yet classic design. To complement the highly polished wood and metal found on Runabout boats, the watch firm polishes the 43 mm steel or rose gold-plated case, its chronograph pushers, its crown, the hands and the dial markers.
What’s more, on the watch’s back the firm has engraved a propeller to recall those on Runabouts, and has created a new sort of heartbeat, namely a hole that opens to the blue-screwed movement. It’s basically a case “porthole” to recall the maritime theme. The automatic model comes in a special gift box along with a miniature wooden model of a Runabout.
For women, Frédérique Constant this year offers true love with a new Heart Beat model called Love Heart Beat. The watch is essentially a new version of the company’s successful Ladies Automatic Heart Beat series, which offers color, diamonds and automatic movements. This year, the dial features a diamond-scripted “love” which actually hugs the “heart beat” aperture that exposes the movement’s inner workings.
The firm has set diamonds into the scripted “love” and offers diamond-encrusted bezels on the 34 mm steel or rose gold plate watches. Dials are available in chocolate, vanilla or opaline with mother-of-pearl.
Frédérique Constant’s own heart is visible as it donates 50 Swiss francs for each Heart Beat watch it sells directly to the International Children’s Heart Foundation, which is a medical charity dedicated to providing free pediatric cardiac surgery to needy children throughout the world.
Dr. William M. Novick, who in 2007 was co-winner of Frédérique Constant’s Passion Awards, created the foundation. That award, in which the firm (with advertising that features the slogan “Live Your Passion”) celebrates an entrepreneurial spirit from any profession and publicizes their work during a ceremony in Geneva, is currently underway and in the nomination period. The next Passion Award is slated for 2010.
This year, however, is a busy one for the firm. In addition to its reorganization and expansion in the United States, race fans can check out its sponsorship with the Healey Challenge this month in Kingston, Ontario, and will be very visible at the next Runabout boating event later this year.

The Frederique Constant Passion Awards for Charity 2010

True passion is the ultimate factor for entrepreneurial success. Frédérique Constant has created a biennial award celebrating entrepreneurial passion: The Frédérique Constant Passion Awards for Charity. For the first time, this year the Passion Awards are focussed... strictly on charitable organizations.

Apply, or nominate your favourite Charity now! For more information and the application forms go to: www.frederique-constant.com/en/passion_award/

Saturday, April 10, 2010

Sebastien Schneiter - Frederique Constant Junior Ambassador - and the Swiss team at the CII World Championship in Cannes, France

b1141049d54073ba185The Swiss CII sailing team is in the middle of the action at the world championship.


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So far so good. Sebastien Schneiter - Frederique Constant Junior Ambassador - is currently qualified for the Youth Olympic Games but still a long way to go. Last regatta he did finish 3rd !

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Alexandra, the second Swiss Byte sailor is doing well and close to be qualified.

Live your Passion

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

The Frederique Constant Passion Awards for Charity

P.A.N.Y


Taking place very soon in New York City...... Check out www.frederique-constant.com[[MORE]]

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Sebastien Schneiter - Frederique Constant Junior Ambassador - and the Swiss team are getting ready for the World Championship

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To support Frédérique Constant Junior, the company will start a dedicated advertising campaign featuring Sebastian and Alex Schneiter. Sebastian Schneiter (14) is currently qualifying for the Youth Olympic Games, a fantastic event in Singapore in 2010.[[MORE]] To succeed at such an event you need a real passion and the story behind such endeavour will be a great one!

Heavy training sessions in Cannes in preparation of the World Championship  are ongoing. Most of the Nations have already arrived and everyday there are practices races. Conditions are ideal and wind are usually strong. One more week to go before the start of the official races. The Swiss team and Sébastien Schneiter doing well and the spirit is high.

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Live your passion!