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 often leans toward the serious. Traditional finishing. Classical complications. Reverent nods to centuries of craft. Then there are watchmakers like Konstantin Chaykin, who approach the entire idea of a mechanical watch from a completely different angle.
Chaykin was the first Russian watchmaker to be admitted to the Académie Horlogère des Créateurs Indépendants (AHCI), and over the past decade, he has built a reputation for watches that blur the line between horology and playful mechanical art. His creations often feel closer to kinetic sculpture than traditional watchmaking, and nowhere is that more obvious than in the Wristmons collection.
Introduced in 2017, his flagship Joker watch quickly became the model that best defined Chaykin’s approach: irreverent, inventive, and impossible to ignore.
At first glance, the Joker is exactly what the name suggests. The dial forms a mischievous face, instantly recognizable and just a little unsettling. The two subdials serve as the watch’s eyes, with the left displaying the hours and the right indicating the minutes. Beneath them sits a wide grin, with the tongue acting as the moon-phase display. The result is something you almost never see in fine watchmaking: a watch that quite literally looks back at you.
What sounds gimmicky on paper works brilliantly on the wrist. Once you spend a few minutes with the Joker, telling the time becomes surprisingly intuitive. The pupils sweep around the eyes like wandering glances, while the moon-phase animates the tongue in the smiling mouth below. At different moments throughout the day, the character seems to adopt new expressions. Around 4:40, the Joker looks cross-eyed; closer to 9:45, he appears distracted, glancing off to the side with mild disapproval. It gives the watch a personality that evolves minute by minute.
The example offered here is an early Joker, the Ref. K07-O.Ti01.03, produced around 2017/2018, shortly after the original stainless-steel debut. Limited to just 88 pieces, this second edition introduced a lightweight titanium case measuring 42mm in diameter. The darker tone of the metal subtly shifts the character of the watch, giving the otherwise playful design a slightly more restrained and modern look.
Look closer, and you begin to appreciate how much craftsmanship lies beneath the humor.
The dial is CNC-milled from a single plate of brass with a wavy guilloché pattern inspired by the work of Russian jeweler Carl Fabergé. The nose and brow feature a distinctive hobnail motif developed specifically for the Wristmons collection. The eye displays and moon-phase elements are individually hand-painted and polished.
Inside beats the automatic calibre K070-0, built on a Swiss ETA 2824-2 base and topped with Chaykin’s proprietary time-display module. Two crowns, cleverly integrated as the watch’s “ears,” allow independent setting of the hours and minutes, while a hidden pusher inside the left crown adjusts the moon-phase. It’s an unconventional layout, but entirely fitting for a watch that rethinks how time can be displayed.
The Joker is not a watch that tries to be discreet or classical. Instead, it embraces something rarely seen in Swiss watchmaking: humor. Yet behind the playful façade lies thoughtful design, intricate dial work, and the sort of mechanical ingenuity that defines the best independent watchmaking today.
In a collecting landscape that often takes itself very seriously, Chaykin's Joker reminds us that watches can still surprise us.
And sometimes, the most memorable ones are the pieces that make you smile every time you check the time.
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.
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