As the resident horological addict for the weird and wonderful, I continue to seek out odd pieces alongside my conventional APs and Rolexes. The fascination with odd ways to tell time started with my mother's watch--A Gerald Genta watch with jumping hours and retrograde minute hand. The actual watch is tucked in a safe somewhere, therefore you may enjoy a stock image: Disclaimer: It's a quartz. Nonetheless, I love how the hand slowly creeps toward the other end of the dial, flicks back to zero and  to continue again on its hourly march. That rapid, near-instantaneous flicker a stark contrast to the delicate nature of the watch. Those who enjoy the instantaneous date change at midnight will surely appreciate  the beauty of such a mechanism. This led me to buy the replica Vacheron Constantin Patrimony Bi-Retrograde Day Date: But, alas,  this automatic watch, is but a replica. And as a replica, it has a functioning retrograde date hand with a faux day hand!  Behold: the Tuesdays watch. You have your Speedy Tuesdays; I have my VC Tuesdays     Although the VC is a beautiful watch, the glued-on day hand is a constant reminder of how I have not found the true retrograde watch. I must continue on my search!   The Watch On one unassuming day, a day so boring I cannot recall the date nor day (perhaps I need more functioning calendar watches), I found this whilst scrolling mindlessly through eBay. You hear angles singing as the case opens... Watch came with the full box and papers. Nifty little bits and bobs. I have no idea with the GBP vs EUR discrepancy on this tag. May well be prophetic of our Sterling post-Brexit Rest assured I paid way waaaay less than  any of those figures            Jean d'Eve Before we go any further, who is this John of the Eve? It is not a name one hears often, or at all even. Its watchmaking roots can be found back in 1867 when a Charles Barbezat-Baillot partnered up with a Henry Guye to form Guye & Barbezat in Le Locle. In 1888, and following Mr Guye's death, the company name had become C. Barbezat-Baillot and manufacturing products branded La Locloise.  In 1905, the company became Manufacture d'Horlogerie Le Phare. The company produced and marketed its own watches, but also manufactured movements for other companies. They were producing minute repeaters, calendar watches, chronographs, and split-second chronographs. Unlike its present incarnation, Le Phare did not fly under the radar. It won gold medals at the Universal Exhibition in Paris (1889 and 1900) and in Liege (1905). Why did it win medals? No idea, I could not find further details and that was a s much the company site would provide. Furthermore, a number of sources claim that Mr Barbezat-Baillot invented the silent regulator for repeater watches. What does this all mean? The traditional minute repeater has an anchor governor/anchor regulator which regulates the speed at which the mechanism chimes. The anchor regulator itself produces noise and depending on your point of view, interferes with/adds to the charm of the repeater chimes. Silent regulators today are centrifugal regulators, the mechanism of which you can read in this link referenced below. Seiko Credor also invented their unique regulator based off a system of different air pressures, read more in link below. Back to dear old John of Eve: claims substantiated or otherwise, Le Phare appeared to be an emerging player in the Swiss watch industry. because in 1915 Zenith bought a majority stake within Le Phare to acquire their know-how. Indeed, a French site dedicated to Zenith's history looks into how Le Phare movements were incorporated into Zenith watches.  Further information below. By 1970, Le Phare had become the 2nd largest Swiss producer of chronographs (claim). And here things get even murkier: Jean d'Eve was established in 1981 and was merged with Le Phare in 1984 to form Le Phare Jean d'Eve S.A. To its credit, prior to the Le Phare merger, Jean d'Eve had already unveiled the Sectora Collection which features a novel double retrograde system to tell time. These were quartz watches. In 1996, it released the Sectora Automatic which featured an automatic movement powering the double retrograde watch. In addition to these watches, they also produced quartz-automatic watches, in the Samara Collection. Credits to @Glaude for assisting with the French articles. Otherwise, it would have been painful to digest this many croissants by myself. Merci!   References: https://www.invenitetfecit.com/modeles/chronographes-poche-neuchatel.html https://www.revolution.watch/horology-301-an-incomplete-introduction-to-the-minute-repeater/?archive https://sites.google.com/site/zenithistoric/zenith-et-les-complications https://gevrilgroup.com/jean-deve-watches/ https://www.jeandeve.ch/en/brand.php Back to my watch!   Dimensions Lug-to-Lug: 32mm Case Width: 25mm Case Height: 7mm It is a tiny watch for tiny..............er....I apply the Inverse-Square  Law between watch size and masculinity, yeah, totes.   Dial Let us now explore the novelties of this dial! It is a white dial in the shape of a near-complete semicircle. The midline of the semicircle is broken up by the casing which hides the pinion for the hands.   At the top part of the dial you can see the branding, in its trademark cursive script. A very miniature font in an already very tiny watch. The 150-degree outer track consists of the hour numerals bounded by grey quadrilaterals, with numeral orientation switching at "7". The script has a very playful character and suits well with the unconventional display concept of this piece. In addition, the asymmetry in size within each numeral (compare top and bottom of each number) matches the asymmetry of the case as a whole too.  The monotony of the black hour numerals is broken up by the red "0", "6" and "12".  The inner red chemin de fer minute scale contrasts well with the black minute numerals. The even slab-serif font of the minute numerals is the conservative counterpart to the whimsical nature of the  hour numerals. Again, the numeral orientation switches at the 7 o'clock mark. The 5-minute intervals between numerals balances legibility and spacing. A simple "SWISS" says it all. But how much of it is actually Swiss made? It seems like almost every manufacturer employs the same minimalist font for the "SWISS' or "SWISS MADE" print. This piece is no exception! A view from a rather awkward angle, just so the reader can catch a glimpse of the magic. The black hour hand, which looks like the spade in playing cards, sits above the red leaf minute hand. A rather unusual hand stack compared to the conventional minute over hour hand sequence. I like to think the overall dial aesthetic evokes the style of a blackjack table. It has the same black and red colour contrast of playing cards; the rounded corners of the grey rectangles again reminds me of cards; the spade-shaped hour hand; and not to mention the overall semicircle shape.    Movement As is the case with most of my beloved gens, I am too cowardly to open up the case, very much the opposite to my gung-ho approach with reps. The Collection name is engraved on the snap-on caseback. But here is a snap of a similar listing which generously shows the quartz movement within.  A 7-jewel movement which Jean d'Eve claims to be made in-house.   Case From researching online, the case is stainless steel with 20 microns of gold plating. The watch was sold to be as "New Old Stock" (Make of it what you will) and the casing does not show any signs of wear at all. Any greyish dullness you see is due to the reflections. The watch case uses a consistent rounded double step design, including in the lugs.  There are few sharp edges on the case. The rounded gold steps give off an air of soft opulence; a watch not for everyday wear (Also advisable due to the delicate nature of the mechanism!), but for special occasions. And likely for women too Above the crown, a rounded crown guard tries to minimise the break in the crescent. Despite this, the crown is easy to manipulate as there is room below it. Despite the unusual appearance of the lugs, it actually employs a bog standard spring bar system underneath. The extrusion on the crescent side beautifully conceals its practical function: without the extrusion, there will be no "lug" on the crescent side to hold the spring bar. From below, you can see the standard spring bar system.   Strap & Buckle Initially, I did abhor the gaudy strap that came with the watch. It reminded me too much that I was wearing quite possibly a women's watch! The red strap goes with the red numerals on the dial. It has an odd double rib within the strap which I am unfamiliar with. The strap is soft and overall, comfortable to wear. I have also grown to appreciate the rich pink/red tone of the leather. The strap comes with a signed gold plated buckle. Original markings; a pleasant surprise! While I did contemplate a sombre black leather strap for the watch, I have come to like this strap. A black strap would have killed the lightness and frivolity of this piece!   Functions As with most of my gen watches again, I hesitate to remove the movement out of the case, even for such an interesting piece. It is difficult to visualise the actual pinion holding the watch hands as they are well-hidden deep inside the triangle. In the photo above, the watch indicates 4:59. It is hard to see that is the case due to the angle of the photo;parallax error comes into play. The hour hand is practically hovering above 5 o'clock already. Unlike the Franck Muller Crazy Hours, the hour hand does advance gradually through the hour. In this photo, the minute hand has jumped back to 0 on the other side of the dial. Another dismal attempt to capture the pinion. I give up for the day...   Overall Although I am 85% sure now that this is a women's watch, I still enjoy wearing this watch very much, and ultimately that is all that matters. It is a major entry to my Odd Watches Section thanks to its unique mechanism. Its striking design is tempered by its petite dimensions. I have finally found the double retrograde watch I wanted         Finally: the quintessential wristshot! A watch that you (or your partner) might like      @McGilli @Luxuracer @TheFreckledTampon @NCRich @Logixa @Theviking@Thommo82 @paccbet @Drfunsocks@bdnica@RussP @Chixisigma @Hyjynx @repmaster1234  @GenTLe