The history of the Tutima brand began in Glashütte, a mythical city of horology whose name is known all over the globe as a byword for the best and most exclusive timepieces in the world. And a place in which Tutima is now once again present with a subsidiary, an exclusive production workshop in a building listed as a historic monument: the old railway maintenance depot in Glashütte. It heralds a new era in the history of Tutima, right at the very heart of the German art of watchmaking.

Glashütte is a small city located in Saxony’s idyllic Müglitz Valley. Its development into a celebrated watchmaking center was anything but straightforward. The first apprentices in the former mining community were trained as watchmakers back in 1845. This was the start of a watchmaking industry that was to earn an excellent international reputation as the years went by. The town reached its heyday as a watchmaking center at the start of the 20th century, when precision pocket watches from Glashütte were among the most highly coveted and most exclusive timepieces of the day.

Tutima advertising from the 1930s

Tutima advertising from the 1930s





The Grand Classic Chronograph PR


Chronograph with 12-hour, 30-minute, and 60-second counters. Power reserve display, subsidiary seconds. Date. Applied numerals. Satin-finished stainless steel case. Screw-in crown. Water-resistant to 10 bar. Bidirectionally rotating bezel with red reference marker. Domed sapphire crystal, anti-reflective on the inside. Sapphire crystal case back. Leather strap. SuperLumiNova luminous compound.











The Grand Classic Havana


Chronograph with 12-hour, 30-minute, and 60-second counters. 24-hour and second time zone display, subsidiary seconds. Date. Satin-finished stainless steel case. Screw-in crown. Water-resistant to 10 bar. Bidirectionally rotating bezel with red reference marker. Domed sapphire crystal, anti-reflective on the inside. Sapphire crystal case back. Leather strap. SuperLumiNova luminous compound.

Limited edition of 800 pieces.