Perpetual Picks: The Story Behind the F.P. Journe Vagabondage I

Perpetual Picks: The Story Behind the F.P. Journe Vagabondage I

A six-month deadline, a wandering display, and a tortue case helped shape the earliest expression of F.P. Journe's Vagabondage idea.

A six-month deadline, a wandering display, and a tortue case helped shape the earliest expression of F.P. Journe's Vagabondage idea.

Welcome to our series highlighting the exceptional watches available through Perpetual, Phillips’ boutique service offering immediate access to the world’s rarest and most desirable timepieces. You can view all currently available watches by stopping in at our London headquarters at 30 Berkeley Square, or by visiting Phillips Perpetual online. Our new "Buy Now" button makes acquiring the watch of your dreams easier than ever.


– ˜By Logan Baker

The F.P. Journe Vagabondage collection officially dates to 2004, but its roots stretch back several years earlier, to the late 1990s, when François-Paul Journe was actively experimenting with unconventional digital displays and case forms.

A circa 2004 F.P. Journe Vagabondage I in platinum that recently sold via Phillips Perpetual in London.

The origin story begins in 1997, when Journe created a unique automatic watch for a close friend and patron. That piece, known as the CARPEDIEM, featured a wandering jump-hour display arranged around a centrally exposed balance wheel. Intrigued by the concept, Journe soon returned to the idea, reworking his blueprints for the case, movement, and dial to fit within one of his signature Flat Tortue cases.

Even then, the Vagabondage remained a work in progress. It was not until 2003 that the project gained real momentum, when Journe was approached to create a unique watch for a charity auction benefiting the ICM Foundation, which supports neurological research. The brief came with a formidable constraint: a production timeline of just six months.

A circa 2004 F.P. Journe Vagabondage I in platinum that recently sold via Phillips Perpetual in London.

Pressed for time, Journe revisited his updated designs and developed what would become a three-piece series of early Vagabondage watches. One example was produced in each of 18k yellow gold, rose gold, and white gold, all fitted with brass movements.

All three watches exceeded expectations at auction – each sold for triple its estimate – underscoring the strength of the concept and the appetite among collectors for something distinctly different from Journe’s existing collection.

A circa 2004 F.P. Journe Vagabondage I in platinum that recently sold via Phillips Perpetual in London.

The Vagabondage stands out as one of the most successful expressions of the circle-in-square motif in 21st-century watchmaking. News of the charity pieces spread quickly, and collectors began asking Journe to produce a broader, though still highly limited, series. He obliged in 2004, giving the Vagabondage an official place in the collection. The name itself is telling: vagabondage in French refers to wandering or roaming, an apt description for a digital display defined by motion rather than fixed registers.

Journe has continued to explore the Vagabondage concept ever since. Each new release has been produced in small batches, typically 68 or 69 pieces, with an unusual continuity built into the program. Owners of a given serial number were offered the opportunity to acquire the corresponding example in subsequent editions, reinforcing the sense of an evolving, tightly knit series.

A circa 2004 F.P. Journe Vagabondage I in platinum that recently sold via Phillips Perpetual in London.

The Vagabondage I debuted in 2004 in a run of 69 watches. It paired a platinum case with an 18k pink-gold, manual-wind movement, the calibre 1504, and notably featured no branding on the dial. Time is displayed via digital jumping hours, paired with a wandering minutes aperture that circles the dial’s perimeter.

At the center of the watch, the balance wheel and escapement are left fully visible, a defining visual signature of the Vagabondage line. As with the original charity pieces and all later models, the dial remains free of the F.P. Journe name. The tortue-shaped case combines a brushed bezel with polished, beveled edges and case sides.

A circa 2004 F.P. Journe Vagabondage I in platinum that recently sold via Phillips Perpetual in London.

The pictured Vagabondage I was recently offered by the Phillips Perpetual team in London and sold almost immediately.

Its swift placement is a clear reminder of the current depth of demand for rare and conceptually important works by F.P. Journe.

You can view this watch and all our currently in-stock watches online at Phillips PERPETUAL.


Phillips PERPETUAL offers a boutique experience to clients for both the sale and purchase of fine and rare watches, in London’s Berkeley Square, Hong Kong's Pedder Arcade, and the Gstaad Palace, in Switzerland.

About Logan Baker

Logan has spent the past ten years covering the watch industry from every angle. He joined Phillips in Association with Bacs & Russo in early 2023 as Senior Editorial Manager, after previous roles at Hodinkee and WatchTime. Originally from Texas, he spent a decade in New York and now calls Geneva home.


Visit Phillips PERPETUAL /

30 Berkeley Square, London, United Kingdom, W1J 6EX (map)
Monday through Friday, 10:00 AM – 17:30 PM

Contact & Consignment Enquiries /

00 44 207 901 7916
perpetual@phillips.com
@phillipsperpetual

Discover More from Phillips PERPETUAL >