iW Magazine Spring 2020 | Page 100

The Wilbur 2020 Automatic, in black steel with a gray back. Inside beats a workhorse Seiko NH35 automatic winding mechanical movement with a customized rotor. Exploded view WE ENTHUSIASTS ARE CURRENTLY EXPERIENCING A MOMENT IN watch- making culture that has rabidly embraced the past. What was old is new again with the next nod to an historical archetype only a microbrand’s crowdfunding success away. Case designs from iconic types are “emulated,” hands circling over dials are cloned, and even the dials themselves are blatant and unrepentant copies of previous types by established brands. In some instances these “homage” types don’t even wait for the passage of time and blatantly copy current Tudor, Rolex, Omega, or even Seiko models. Often, the major brands themselves are dipping into the past and revisiting previous incarnations in a somewhat more palatable redux of their own precedents, finding kitsch value in what might otherwise be deemed an outdated look. Don’t get me wrong, some of these are great entrees into a style or a type at a fraction of the price of the authentic original. However, if mimetic mementos are your taste in timepieces, you may want to go ahead and skip 100 | INTERNATIONAL WATCH | SPRING 2020 the next few pages. ENTER WILBUR Jason Wilbur is an award-winning designer with futuristic and functional iterations in a variety of métiers. He’s designed products like flying quadcopters, speedboats, acrylic guitars, underwater drones and even aluminum shoes. Companies came to him to design these things be- cause they knew he’d push the limits and throw convention to the wind. This attitude is at the very core of the new Wilbur watches.   You may have seen his previous work as his horological muse first came to life in partnership when Devon Motorworks launched the futuristic Tread 1. At the time, not only was Wilbur ahead of the curve with regard to the bold façade, the Tread 1 also incorporated technology that was new to watchmaking for tracking and displaying the time, as well as being almost entirely made in the U.S.