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Vulcain Introduces New Dial Variants in the Skindiver Nautique Line

Vulcain Introduces New Dial Variants in the Skindiver Nautique Line

Back in March of last year, Zach Weiss reviewed the Vulcain Skindiver Nautique. This was a case where the headline really said it all, but of course the whole review is worth a read for a fuller context. I had some hands-on time with this watch as well, and agree completely with his sentiments. Describing the watch as “very reasonable” is really essential to understanding it. It’s not extraordinary, it’s not a revolution in watchmaking. It’s a deeply adequate and relentlessly normal execution of tried and true sports watch format: the skin diver. And that’s OK! The entire idea of the modern skin diver is really based on the fact that a handful of brands really nailed the design decades ago. It’s not a platform that needs to be played with. There are lots of new versions of this type of watch from a huge variety of brands, and I think “reasonable” is really what most of them should be shooting for. 

Vulcain has just announced a total of four new variants of the Nautique Skindiver, and they strive to offer a little more variety than the initial drop from last spring. New dial variants include options in orange, brown, and green, as well as a new reference with a bronze case and black dial, and a very striking variant in yellow gold plate with a dial in a dark shade of blue. This one, I have to admit, is a little outside the bounds of reasonable, and might be striving for something a little more. 

All of the new Skindiver Nautique variants have the same 38mm case we saw last year that measures 12.2mm tall, running on a reliable ETA 2824 movement. All references are water resistant to 200 meters and also feature a standard black ceramic bezel, which slightly undercuts the vintage vibes Vulcain is going for here, but still looks pretty sharp. I think the colors all appear to be nicely executed, particularly the brown dial, which suggests a dial that has baked in the tropical sun for decades. 

The gold plated version is a surprise, and brings an aesthetic to the Nautique line that we honestly wouldn’t have imagined a year ago. The skin diver, at its core, is a casual, function first, tool. Luxury divers in precious metals are a more recent phenomenon, and we rarely see the look intermingled with something in the skin diver niche. It goes just a little bit against the grain, which is not something we’d have counted on a year ago from a watch so awash in reasonableness. 

Pricing starts at $1,610 for the steel models, and shoots up to $1,900 for the gold plated version and $2,150 for the bronze. More information can be found at Vulcain’s website right here

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