Furlan Marri Cornes De VachevsLongines MASTER COLLECTION
The numbers, the dial colors, the calibers — laid out so you can stop flipping between tabs.
At a glance
18 of 29 specs differFull specifications
Case
7 specsCrystal & Dial
4 specsMovement
6 specsPricing
1 specsFollow this matchup
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Owners + reviewers, side by side
Synthesized for each watch independently from owner discussions, enthusiast forums, written reviews, and video reviewers.
The Furlan Marri Cornes de Vache Blue Sector is lauded for its vintage-inspired design, featuring distinctive cow horn lugs and a compact 37.5mm case. Reviewers highlight its complex case finishing with sharp transitions and polished surfaces, a subtly grained azure blue dial with a printed sector and applied Breguet numerals, and the La Joux-Perret G100 automatic movement. This movement provides a 68-hour power reserve, with accuracy noted as within ±7 seconds per day. The watch is priced at CHF 1,250 excl. taxes or A$2,600. On balance, reviewers praise the Furlan Marri Cornes de Vache Blue Sector for its elegant, wearable vintage aesthetic and detailed finishing at its price point.
The watch features a 37.5mm stainless steel case with a coin-edge bezel and a box sapphire crystal. Its price point is relatively high compared to other independent watchmakers. Reviewers disagree on the movement, with one noting the Swiss La Joux-Perret G100 movement and the other mentioning a Japanese quartz movement.
The Longines Master Collection is widely praised for its classic design, good value, and attractive dial work, with specific callouts for Breguet numerals, leaf hands, and barleycorn or hobnail textures. Owners and reviewers frequently highlight the excellent fit and finish, comfortable case sizes like 40mm, and the value offered by complications such as chronographs, moon phases, and annual calendars at competitive price points. The collection is seen as traditionally dressy, with some noting its thinness and appreciation for its bracelet finishing. However, some owners find the case finishing homogenous or the MSRP hard to justify, citing issues like cheap-feeling pushers or a chrono hour counter that doesn't always reset. Specific design elements like the subdial cutting off numerals or the overall aesthetic of certain dials and hands are not universally appealing.
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