Manufacturer: Blancpain Year: Circa 1965/70 Case No: 15'042 Model Name: "Air Command" Material: Stainless steel Calibre: Manual, cal. Valjoux 222, 17 jewels Bracelet/Strap: Leather Clasp/Buckle: Stainless steel buckle Dimensions: 42mm diameter Signed: Case and dial signed
Catalogue Essay
Blancpain was founded in 1735 in Switzerland, well known for producing high-end watches through the present day. The historic firm’s famous diver’s watches rank amongst the most desirable vintage wristwatches.
Blancpain’s Air Command model is one of the most legendary collector’s wristwatches – but equally myth-enshrouded. In fact, there is no official documentation about this model and scholars are of the opinion that it was never commercialized or produced in series. Following the firm’s success within the divers community and supplying, amongst others, the US Navy, Blancpain decided to enter the market for pilot’s watches and apparently proposed the Air Command to the US Air Force. No orders were placed and the Air Command project was not pursued.
Like many other Swiss manufacturers, Blancpain was hit by the quartz crisis and, in the early 1970s, had to sell many of its assets, including some unfinished watches. With only a handful of specimen of this mythical model known to have survived, it is hard to determine what the exact specifications of the Air Command are. However, as some of the Air Commands have Blancpain-signed movements, it is possible that examples like the one presented here have only been assembled and fitted with a Valjoux 222 after the sell-off of the cases, dials, bezels and pushers and hands.
With its robust diameter of 42mm, excellent overall condition and fascinating history, this Air Command is one of the most captivating chronographs of the 1960s. Originally designed for pilots, it looks equally good when worn outside the cockpit. Given its utter rarity, there is very little chance one will casually bump into someone wearing one too…
As the watchmaking brand with the earliest founding date, Blancpain remains close to tradition, concentrating on classical mechanical watches. Established in 1735 by Jehan-Jacques Blancpain, the Le Brassus manufacturer today continues to innovate with the development of high-quality calibres and is proud of their heritage, having never made quartz watches. One of the firm's greatest successes was the Fifty Fathom wristwatch introduced in 1953 — the vintage models of which are now highly coveted by collectors. The earliest dive watch available to the market, Fifty Fathom came out a year prior to Rolex's Submariner. Another key model is the Air Command from the 1960s, considered one of the most mythical collector's watches due to their extreme rarity. Today, the firm specializes in creative innovated complicated timepieces.