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Interestingly, astronaut Michael López-Alegría was there as well, serving as the director of business development at Axiom.Special thanks to the following individuals who helped make this article possible: Nick Federowicz of Ad Patina,I'm still wondering about the latter but I also have to say that I'm grateful to whatever horological guardian angel I have, that stayed my hand and made me ask Tudor to send me a sample. I wasn't prepared to be underwhelmed, exactly, but I wouldn't have been surprised to find myself more or less unmoved when I got the watch and put it on.What can you even compare it to, horological speaking? There truly is nothing out there quite like this. If the technology in demonstrator aircraft is proven link viable, then it trickles down into production designs years later, so I wouldn't be surprised if this watch marks the beginning of TAG Heuer's dominance in the implementation of lab-grown diamonds in horological applications.When I visited Glashütte for the first time last year, I got to spend some time with the folks at Nomos and dive a bit into their archives to suss out what might make some Nomos releases more collectible than others. But, with so many watches in front of me, I felt like I needed a little bit of help. So, the kind folks at the brand suggested I look at the Instagram page "Nomos Collectibles Archive" (or what I'll call NCA).</br> Offering a mostly brushed case with polished bevels, the Farer Automatic Chronograph is 39mm wide, 45mm lug to lug, and just 12.5mm thick, excellent sizing for a sporty automatic chronograph, and certainly thinner than what we link might usually expect from the genre. With short lugs and a brushed bezel, the Eldridge wears nicely, offering an impressive pop of color with a versatile and considered footprint on the wrist (including the thoughtful match of dial color to date disk color).The 36.5mm case is really what cements this as an important release in my mind. In the current horological landscape, it feels like 36mm is where modern taste bottoms out. It's the smallest you can go before you can truly call a watch small. The extra half a millimeter here is like stat-padding for GS. The original watch was 37.5mm, a sort of perfect size in its own right, but there's something so appealing about a confident, 44GS-inspired watch that's even smaller – that doesn't cut corners.A year on from the watch's 50th Anniversary, the releases from AP a week or so ago gave two examples of what you can do without messing with that balanced 39mm by 8.1mm package. Both new "Jumbo" Extra-Thin releases are striking in their own ways but examples of what you can do if you're boxed into the corner of being an icon in form and dimension. How do you iterate on that box and what's inside it?</br>
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