On the workbench he built himself thirty years ago, 240 watches wait in their cases. No warehouse inventory. No mass production from overseas. Just what remains of two years of work condensed into a shed in Gloucester.
Every watch contains a genuine mechanical movement. No battery. No quartz. The open heart beats in rhythm with the wrist that wears it.
✅ The white sunburst enamel dial. The balance wheel is visible through the aperture, oscillating constantly. "When you check the time, you see life inside. That's what makes this watch different from everything else."
✅ The genuine croco-embossed leather strap, hand-stitched. Inspired by the logbooks that accompanied every voyage. It develops a patina over time, molds to your wrist, darkens slightly with the years the way the leather on a well-kept old boat does. "My father used to say good leather is like a good boat: it doesn't wear out, it gets better."
✅ The open-heart mechanical movement, 22 jewels. Every gear, every wheel, every spring is visible through the dial. The balance wheel oscillates at 21,600 beats per hour. "This isn't electronics. It's alive."
✅ The gold-toned steel case, marine instrument finish. Inspired by the brass chronometers and compasses Jack worked alongside for forty-three years. Tough, elegant, timeless.
✅ The gold-toned luminescent indices and hands. Visible in the dark, just like the instrument panels aboard ships. The light is in the metal, not painted on.
✅ The crown signed LONGLUX, engraved with the winged logo. Every piece carries the signature of its maritime heritage. "The sea made this watch. I just put the pieces together."
"This isn't a luxury watch," Jack warns. "It's a watch with a soul. If you're looking for flash, keep moving. If you're looking for something with meaning, then this one's for you."
Buyers get it right away. Many order several: for their father, their brother, a friend who grew up near the water. "The best gifts carry a story," Jack observes. "This one comes from the ocean."
When these 240 watches are gone, it really is over. The yard closes on June 30. And with it, forty-three years of a legacy built piece by piece, hull after hull.
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