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Patek - 570J - Cadran tropical

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Patek - 570J - Cadran tropical
Patek - 570J - Cadran tropical

Timepiece Information

Catalogue Notes

Patek - 570J - Cadran tropical
Vers 1956 · Boîtier n° 309.109 · Mouvement n° 706.428 . Heure uniquement. Ce modèle, choisi 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 distingue 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 extrait.

Specifications & Accompaniments
Reference
Patek Philippe Reference 570J
Year of Production
1956
Original Date of Sale
October 3, 1957
Case Material
18k Yellow Gold
Dimensions
Diameter 35 mm, Thickness 10.95 mm, Lug to Lug 43.5 mm, Lug Width 20 mm
Dial
Original silvered dial with raised enamel PATEK PHILIPPE GENEVE signature remaining crisp and well defined
Movement
Caliber 27SC, manual wind, center seconds
Caseback
Snap-back (fond encliqueté)
Strap / Bracelet / Buckle
Shiny black genuine crocodile strap with stitching showing moderate wear. Aftermarket buckle bearing PPC with maker’s mark in an oval and stamped ACIER INOX SWISS, in the style of period Patek Philippe buckles.
Accompanied By
Extract from the Archives, WRISTORIAN Presentation Packaging
WRISTORIAN Perspective
The Patek Philippe Reference 570 occupies a distinctive place within the Calatrava lineage. Introduced in 1938 as an enlarged interpretation of the earlier Reference 96, the model brought a more assertive presence to Patek Philippe’s otherwise restrained dress watch vocabulary. At approximately 35 millimeters in diameter—a generous size for the period—the watch offered a modern scale while preserving the balanced proportions that define the Calatrava tradition.

Collectors would later refer to the model affectionately as the “Calatravone,” a nickname that acknowledges both its dimensions and its quiet authority. The design language is pure mid-century Patek Philippe: slender lugs extending cleanly from the case, faceted baton markers, and sharply cut dauphine hands arranged across a dial whose elegance derives from restraint rather than embellishment. In this form the watch expresses a philosophy central to the manufacture’s identity—that refinement in horology is often achieved not through complication, but through proportion, clarity, and disciplined design.

The present example illustrates another reality familiar to collectors of mid-century Patek Philippe: the passage of time leaves visible traces on original lacquered dials. Here the protective lacquer layer has developed extensive crazing across the silvered surface, forming a delicate network of fine lines that has emerged naturally over decades. While visually distinctive, this pattern reflects the aging behavior commonly encountered in lacquer finishes of the era and remains consistent with originality. The enamel signature remains crisp, the applied markers retain their sharp geometry, and the watch continues to convey the honest character that defines many carefully preserved vintage pieces.

For collectors drawn to the understated authority of Patek Philippe’s mid-century designs, the Reference 570 remains one of the most enduring expressions of the Calatrava form. Its proportions feel remarkably contemporary even today, while the manual-wound architecture and disciplined dial preserve the intellectual purity of the original concept. Examples that retain their original components and authentic character offer a particularly compelling connection to the era in which they were made—an era when elegance in watchmaking was defined less by complexity than by proportion, craftsmanship, and time itself.
Service & Operation
Service History
Serviced September 27, 2025
Operational Status
Observed running and setting normally at the time of cataloguing. The movement has not been tested for accuracy over extended periods or for power reserve duration, and may require servicing at the buyer’s discretion. As is customary with vintage timepieces, future performance cannot be guaranteed.