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 by 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
Independent watchmaking has a way of bringing the story of the person behind the watch into sharper focus.
Without the safety net of a centuries-old brand or a global marketing machine, what remains is the watchmaker’s own taste, discipline, and imagination.
Few modern independents embody that spirit more clearly than Stefan Kudoke.
Kudoke’s path into watchmaking was not the usual one. Growing up in Frankfurt in the early 1990s, his first creative outlet came through graffiti and airbrushed artwork on cars and motorcycles. Watchmaking arrived almost by accident.
Encouraged by his mother to pursue a trade, he apprenticed in Glashütte and eventually joined Glashütte Original, working in the complications and prototypes workshop. Later, a stint in New York servicing complicated watches for Breguet, Blancpain, and Omega deepened his technical experience.
Still, Kudoke was never interested in simply assembling watches. He wanted to master the crafts that give watchmaking its soul. Through years of study and practice, he developed his skills in engraving and finishing before founding his own brand in 2008. Early Kudoke watches often featured elaborate skeletonization and engraving, pieces that felt closer to miniature artworks than traditional timekeepers.
A turning point came in 2019 with the release of the Kudoke K2. Powered by the brand’s first proprietary movement, the Kaliber 1, the watch marked a shift toward a more restrained aesthetic while preserving Kudoke’s devotion to handcraft.
The watch went on to win the Petite Aiguille prize at the 2019 Grand Prix d’Horlogerie de Genève, instantly elevating Kudoke’s profile among collectors.
Spend even a few moments with the Kudoke K2 Salmon, and it becomes clear why. At first glance, the watch appears elegantly simple. Then the details begin to emerge.
The salmon dial carries a lightly frosted surface that interacts beautifully with changing light, giving the watch a subtle vibrancy that photographs struggle to capture fully. The salmon tone alone places it firmly within an aesthetic beloved by collectors, yet Kudoke avoids leaning too heavily on nostalgia.
The eye naturally gravitates to the feature at 12 o’clock: a domed rotating disc that completes one revolution every 24 hours. Hand-engraved and galvanically treated in gold, black, and white rhodium, it depicts the sun, moon, and stars, with day and night indicated by a discreet golden arrow. It’s both poetic and practical, adding motion and storytelling to an otherwise calm dial.
The surrounding chapter rings, rhodium-plated for contrast, frame the composition nicely. Thermally blued steel hands display Kudoke’s signature infinity motif, a small garnish that reinforces the watchmaker’s personal touch.
The proportions feel just right as well. The polished stainless-steel case measures 39mm across and 10.7mm thick, a size that wears comfortably while maintaining classical balance.
Flip the watch over, and the true heart of the Kudoke K2 reveals itself. The hand-wound Kaliber 1-24H draws inspiration from early English pocket watch movements of the 17th century. That influence appears most clearly in the elongated balance cock, an architectural flourish that gives the movement its distinct personality. Nearly every visible surface carries hand engraving, reminding you that this is a watch finished by human hands rather than automated processes.
The movement offers a reasonable 46-hour power reserve, but the real pleasure lies in studying it. Few watches in this segment combine such traditional finishing, distinctive design language, and independent spirit so convincingly.
In many ways, the Kudoke K2 represents what independent watchmaking does best.
It reflects a single watchmaker’s journey, from graffiti artist to award-winning craftsman, expressed through a watch that feels thoughtful, personal, and unmistakably handmade.
You can learn more about this watch and view all the 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
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