Patek - 3440J - Tiffany
Circa 60 · N° de boîtier 316.847 · N° de mouvement 1.114.145. Heure uniquement. Ce modèle, choisi avec soin pour son équilibre entre originalité et authenticité, témoigne de l'attrait intemporel du design Patek Philippe du milieu du XXe siècle. Ses proportions harmonieuses épousent parfaitement le poignet, tandis que la finesse de la typographie du cadran et des finitions du boîtier souligne la quête discrète d'excellence de la manufacture. Les collectionneurs apprécieront la qualité des composants et l'élégance sobre qui le place au-delà des tendances éphémères : un objet fonctionnel sublimé par la forme. Sur le marché actuel, les connaisseurs recherchent de tels exemplaires pour leur cohérence et la clarté de leur histoire : un garde-temps fonctionnel, préservé avec respect plutôt qu'avec ostentation. Adapté à un usage quotidien ou à une étude approfondie au sein d'une collection spécialisée, il offre à la fois une satisfaction esthétique et un potentiel de collection à long terme. Accompagné d'un certificat d'authenticité.


Patek - 3440J - Tiffany
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Patek - 3440J - Tiffany
Prix de vente$16,851.00 USD
Timepiece Information
Catalogue Notes
Specifications & Accompaniments
Reference
Reference 3440J
Year of Production
Movement number consistent with production during the 1961–1966 period
Original Date of Sale
Original date of sale unknown
Case Material
18K yellow gold
Dimensions
Case diameter 34.2 mm; thickness approximately 11.25 mm including crystal; lug width 18 mm; lug-to-lug 40 mm
Dial
Champagne-toned dial exhibiting even, age-consistent patination, with applied gold baton hour markers and double signature for Patek Philippe and Tiffany & Co.
Movement
Self-winding calibre 27-460 with subsidiary seconds, featuring an 18K gold rotor and Gyromax balance
Caseback
Threaded screw-back case construction, offering improved protection against moisture and dust.
Strap / Bracelet / Buckle
Thin brown glossy lizard strap showing minimal wear, fitted with a gold buckle, neither original to the watch
Accompanied By
Presented with WRISTORIAN packaging
WRISTORIAN Perspective
The Reference 3440 belongs to a moment when Patek Philippe was refining, not reinventing. By the early 1960s the manufacture had already resolved the essential language of the Calatrava: disciplined proportions, restrained dial architecture, and mechanical seriousness expressed without theatrical complication. What followed in this period was not stylistic upheaval but technical maturation.
At the center of that evolution was the automatic calibre 27-460. Thin, mechanically rigorous, and engineered for long-term reliability, the movement represents one of Patek Philippe’s most respected self-winding calibres of the mid-twentieth century. In early subsidiary-seconds executions such as the Ref. 3440, the manufacture preserved the classical dial symmetry associated with earlier manually wound Calatravas. The result is a watch that quietly unites tradition and progress—automatic architecture housed within a dial grammar inherited from the brand’s earlier era.
The case architecture reflects a similar philosophy of refinement. Unlike many earlier Calatravas that relied upon snap-back construction, the Ref. 3440 employs a threaded screw-back case offering improved resistance to dust and moisture. At the same time, the gently downturned lugs allow the watch to sit naturally on the wrist despite its relatively generous diameter for the era. The watch therefore retains the elegance of a dress Calatrava while embracing the practical expectations of a modern wristwatch.
The Tiffany & Co. co-signature situates the watch within one of the most important retail partnerships in twentieth-century horology. For decades the New York jeweler Tiffany & Co. served as Patek Philippe’s principal representative in the United States, introducing the manufacture’s watches to generations of American collectors. Dials bearing both signatures document that relationship and occupy a distinctive place within the commercial and cultural history of the brand.
Even the smaller details reinforce the period character of the watch. The early double-P crown—engraved with the back-to-back “PP” motif—anchors the watch firmly within its production window before the Calatrava cross became the manufacture’s standardized crown signature. The crystal, appearing somewhat thicker than typically encountered on the reference, likely reflects a later replacement, a practical intervention consistent with decades of responsible ownership and routine maintenance.
The Ref. 3440 also occupies a meaningful position within the broader Calatrava lineage that began with the Reference 96 in 1932. While the earliest Calatravas were strictly manually wound instruments, the 3440 demonstrates how Patek Philippe adapted that disciplined architectural language to the automatic era without abandoning the proportions that defined the original design. It represents the moment when the classical Calatrava successfully entered the age of automatic watchmaking.
Time has left its own quiet imprint as well. The champagne dial displays warm, even patina accumulated through decades of careful wear, while the case surfaces retain visible hallmarks alongside the gentle evidence of past polishing. Watches such as this rarely remain untouched for more than half a century; what collectors seek instead is honest continuity. Nearly sixty years after its manufacture, the watch presents with the balanced character of an object that has been worn, maintained, and respectfully preserved rather than aggressively restored.
Serious collectors have long recognized that certain references capture transitional moments within a manufacture’s evolution. The Ref. 3440 sits comfortably within that category—uniting the disciplined aesthetics of the mid-century Calatrava with the mechanical confidence of Patek Philippe’s early automatic era. With its Tiffany signature, respected 27-460 movement, and balanced proportions, the reference offers something increasingly rare in modern collecting: a watch whose authority derives not from spectacle but from lineage, proportion, and quiet mechanical confidence.
At the center of that evolution was the automatic calibre 27-460. Thin, mechanically rigorous, and engineered for long-term reliability, the movement represents one of Patek Philippe’s most respected self-winding calibres of the mid-twentieth century. In early subsidiary-seconds executions such as the Ref. 3440, the manufacture preserved the classical dial symmetry associated with earlier manually wound Calatravas. The result is a watch that quietly unites tradition and progress—automatic architecture housed within a dial grammar inherited from the brand’s earlier era.
The case architecture reflects a similar philosophy of refinement. Unlike many earlier Calatravas that relied upon snap-back construction, the Ref. 3440 employs a threaded screw-back case offering improved resistance to dust and moisture. At the same time, the gently downturned lugs allow the watch to sit naturally on the wrist despite its relatively generous diameter for the era. The watch therefore retains the elegance of a dress Calatrava while embracing the practical expectations of a modern wristwatch.
The Tiffany & Co. co-signature situates the watch within one of the most important retail partnerships in twentieth-century horology. For decades the New York jeweler Tiffany & Co. served as Patek Philippe’s principal representative in the United States, introducing the manufacture’s watches to generations of American collectors. Dials bearing both signatures document that relationship and occupy a distinctive place within the commercial and cultural history of the brand.
Even the smaller details reinforce the period character of the watch. The early double-P crown—engraved with the back-to-back “PP” motif—anchors the watch firmly within its production window before the Calatrava cross became the manufacture’s standardized crown signature. The crystal, appearing somewhat thicker than typically encountered on the reference, likely reflects a later replacement, a practical intervention consistent with decades of responsible ownership and routine maintenance.
The Ref. 3440 also occupies a meaningful position within the broader Calatrava lineage that began with the Reference 96 in 1932. While the earliest Calatravas were strictly manually wound instruments, the 3440 demonstrates how Patek Philippe adapted that disciplined architectural language to the automatic era without abandoning the proportions that defined the original design. It represents the moment when the classical Calatrava successfully entered the age of automatic watchmaking.
Time has left its own quiet imprint as well. The champagne dial displays warm, even patina accumulated through decades of careful wear, while the case surfaces retain visible hallmarks alongside the gentle evidence of past polishing. Watches such as this rarely remain untouched for more than half a century; what collectors seek instead is honest continuity. Nearly sixty years after its manufacture, the watch presents with the balanced character of an object that has been worn, maintained, and respectfully preserved rather than aggressively restored.
Serious collectors have long recognized that certain references capture transitional moments within a manufacture’s evolution. The Ref. 3440 sits comfortably within that category—uniting the disciplined aesthetics of the mid-century Calatrava with the mechanical confidence of Patek Philippe’s early automatic era. With its Tiffany signature, respected 27-460 movement, and balanced proportions, the reference offers something increasingly rare in modern collecting: a watch whose authority derives not from spectacle but from lineage, proportion, and quiet mechanical confidence.
Service & Operation
Service History
Serviced April 30, 2025
Operational Status
Observed running and setting correctly at the time of cataloguing