Got together with former officemates from 25by8 for our annual Christmas get together yesterday at Jay-j’s, Ortigas HomeDepot. It was one of the bigger gatherings. As usual the girls gravitated towards each other and started talking about marriage, babies, and other such girlie things. And as usual the boys gravitated towards each other and started talking about computer games and programming languages and other such geeky things. Haha. 25by8 people sure are a swell bunch. Wish I could replicate that in my current company.
The Le Locle uses the ETA 2824-2 movement. It is a tried and tested automatic movement with manual wind and quick date set. Both features are useful for when you haven’t worn the watch for long and it dies. With manual wind, there no need to swing the watch around (and maybe bang it on something) to get the movement started. Quick set allows you to set the date directly without having to spin the hands through the 24 hour cycle. Less stress for you and the movement.
The 40mm case is round and made of stainless steel. The sides are vertically brushed while the lugs, bezel, and caseback are mirror polished. The face, of course, is sapphire. The caseback has engravings and a two-panel sapphire window where you can view the movement in action: the gears, the gold-plated rotor, the incabloc, etc. The view is a little cramped since instead of a one-piece, it has a two-piece sapphire window. The crown is a non-nonsense crown signed with a “T”. Simple and elegant.
The dial is silver with a crosshatch pattern (guilloche I think it’s called) Roman numeral hour markings. It has several other markings. On the upper part there’s the brand “TISSOT” and just below it “1853”. On the lower part, there’s the model “Le Locle” in script and just below it “AUTOMATIC”. Also at the lower part, near the edge of the dial is “SWISS MADE” just in case you forget it is. The three hands are black with a classic design.
The strap is black leather with a polished stainless steel deployment clasp. When closed, the only visible part of the clasp is a small strip with a “T” sign. It’s great, but I still think a standard buckle assembly is better.
The overall look and feel of the watch is that of a timeless classic. Exactly as I wanted.
More comprehensive reviews here and here.
Rating: 5/5
So during the wedding. I was walking around everywhere in my barong, slacks, and not-too-comfy dress shoes taking photos. At one point, the sakristan asked me to stay back as I was intruding into Jesus’ personal space. Apologies for not knowing the wedding shoot conventions. Won’t happen again :D
Difficulties with conventions aside, there’s also the dim church interior. It definitely calls for a larger aperture or a flash. I dislike the latter though because it’s a bit obtrusive (I’m just a backup photographer after all) and drains batteries (I’m using the pop-up flash and didn’t have spare batteries).
Also, there’s the pace of things. Although things at a wedding mostly go at a snail pace, some things happen so fast you literally only have one shot at it. Yes, I screwed up the kissing the bride part (darn darn darn!). I definitely need to improve my focusing and snap shooting skills.
And thus went my first wedding photo shoot.