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Panerai

There used to be a small watchmaker’s shop with the “Orologeria Svizzera” sign in the Palazzo Arcivescovile in the Florentine Piazza San Giovanni. Today, the palace houses a large Panerai boutique. The brand with Italian origins and a manufacture in Neuchâtel, Switzerland, interweaves its Italian history and Swiss present. Panerai watches exude unrestrained passion for the seas and oceans and can’t be mistaken for any other watch on the market. They say you’ll either love or hate Panerai. Yet decidedly, more numerous are those who fell in love with this unique brand offering both robust and unmistakably elegant watches.

Where to buy?

Boutique Carollinum Boutique
Pařížská 11, Praha 1
+420 224 810 890
more information Navigate to the Carollinum Boutique
Diver’s watch
Panerai has always been intrigued by the underwater world and its first watch, Radiomir, designed exclusively for divers in the Royal Italian Navy, attests to this strong bond. Since then, Panerai has never given up its passion for the seas and oceans.
Distinctive look
A Panerai watch is easy to tell at a glance. This is due to its characteristic, stylish sandwich dial, crown-protecting bridge and cushion-shaped case.
Robustness
The first Radiomir model featured a 47 mm case and these robust dimensions remain Panerai’s emblem to this day. Panerai watches, especially models from the Submersible collection, are often nicknamed “survival instruments”.
Lifestyle
Since its beginnings, the Panerai brand has been associated with men whose lives are filled with adrenaline and are exposed to extreme conditions and danger. Diving is written in the genetic information of the Panerai brand, but in recent years it has not wanted to limit itself to divers (although the brand's ambassador is also freediving world champion Guillaume Néry). For fifteen years, the brand has collaborated with adventurer and polar explorer Mike Horn.
Durability
Panerai is synonymous with an adventurous lifestyle and the resistance and durability of its watches fully correspond to this concept. Panerai timepieces can accompany its wearer for a swim or a mountain trek, but they can also endure far more.
Innovation
Panerai and the desire for improvement have always gone hand in hand. Panerai is famous for its groundbreakingly innovative materials used for the luminescent elements, the bezel and the case. The brand also manufactures watches with a winding crown on the opposite side for its left-handed customers.



More about Panerai

Panerai watches, whose cases hide the manufacture’s own automatic and mechanical movements, fall into four collections. The first two, slightly more basic ones, Radiomir and Luminor, were created in the mid-20th century. Among Panerai watches, it is the Luminor, both in its original version and in the elegant Luminor Due edition, that has remained one of the brand’s most popular timepieces. Since 2019 the warranty period has been extended to eight years.

Panerai gained in popularity in the 1990s thanks to the action film hero Sylvester Stallone, who would wear the brand’s robust timepieces. However, it doesn’t want to be a regular watch manufacturer, Panerai wants to be a lifestyle brand. For this reason, some of its limited editions come with a unique experience. The exclusivity of the brand is further enhanced by limited production and the fact that many Panerai watches become the object of desire of many collectors. Panerai is also one of the brands pioneering a sustainable approach to watchmaking.


 

The brand’s history 

In 1860 Giovanni Panerai opened his watch shop, Orologeria Svizzera, in Florence, Italy. This doubled as a workshop and watchmaking school for young watchmakers. Yet the real beginning of the brand, whose full name is Officine Panerai, starts in 1916: this is when Guido Panerai, the founder’s grandson, had a radium-based powder patented. Named Radiomir, this material made it easy to read numerals and markers in the dark. Panerai’s first collection, a series that has been manufactured for the Italian Navy since 1938, bears the same name.

The brand’s second collection, Luminor, with its emblematic crown-protecting bridge, was born in 1949 and has remained one of the Panerai icons.

Panerai’s solid foundations were laid during the first half of the 20th century, yet the brand’s true expansion came as late as the 1990s. In 1993, Panerai presented a collection of watches that was not designed for army use but for the general public. This was the first time the brand had forayed into this sector. Four years later, the Richemont Group acquired Panerai and the brand has remained part of the Group to this day. Panerai has since come a long way: in 2002 the brand opened its own manufacture in Neuchâtel, Switzerland and three years later presented its own in-house calibre. By doing so, Panerai made a clear demonstration that it belongs to the world of high horology and has never quit its place in it since.

At present, Officine Panerai manufactures some twenty-five calibres and its watchmakers aren’t afraid of such royal complications as a tourbillon or minute repeater. Panerai certainly doesn’t rest on its laurels when it comes to innovation, so deeply imbedded in the brand’s history and spirit, and develops new materials for cases, dials and even movement components.