About Chronoswiss

History and DNA

Chronoswiss

Independent Watchmaking, Born in 1983

Chronoswiss was founded in 1983 in Munich by master watchmaker Gerd-Rüdiger Lang, at a time when mechanical watches had nearly disappeared in the wake of the quartz crisis. Lang’s mission was radical: to revive and elevate traditional mechanical watchmaking, focusing on transparency, craftsmanship, and technical expression.

The early days

of Chronoswiss

Chronoswiss was born not in calm — but in crisis. In 1983, Master watchmaker Gerd-Rüdiger Lang, recently unemployed after the collapse of Heuer Time (Germany), defied the odds and the Quartz Crisis by founding his own brand. With little more than conviction, a garage full of mechanical parts, and an unshakable belief in traditional watchmaking, he began building wristwatches that honored the past while daring toward the future. His earliest creations revived rare calibers and embraced mechanical honesty at a time when the industry was abandoning it.

Defining moments

The Régulateur

Chronoswiss found its signature in 1987 with the launch of the Régulateur — a mechanical statement that challenged dial convention and celebrated horological history. Inspired by regulator clocks once used by watchmakers to set precision, it featured a separated display of hours, minutes, and seconds. The watch also introduced what would become unmistakable design codes: the onion crown, straight lugs, a finely fluted bezel, and the 19-part case construction. Chronoswiss became a brand recognized at a glance, yet remembered for its mechanical depth.

19801990
200020102020
1987

Régulateur

The beginning of a legacy. Chronoswiss launches the world’s first serially produced wristwatch with a regulator-style dial, powered by the in-house refined caliber 122. A bold reinterpretation of traditional precision timekeeping.

1991

Kairos

Innovation in motion. With the Kairos Chronograph, Chronoswiss unveils the first automatic chronograph featuring a decentralized hour and minute display - a technical breakthrough that redefined dial architecture.

1992

Cabrio

Form meets function. The Cabrio debuts as a pioneering reversible wristwatch, combining playful ingenuity with timeless elegance - a rare collector’s piece with mechanical charisma.

1995

Opus

A mechanical sculpture. With the Opus, Chronoswiss introduces the first automatic skeletonized chronograph, a masterclass in transparency and complexity that would become a pillar of the brand’s DNA.

1996

Delphis

Breaking boundaries. The Delphis becomes the first watch in history to combine digital jumping hours, retrograde minutes, and analog seconds - a trilogy of time displays, seamlessly integrated into one dial.

2000

Timemaster

The birth of an icon.
The Timemaster makes its mark with oversized luminous hands and its now-signature onion crown, becoming a bold symbol of contemporary mechanical watchmaking.

2005

Digiteur

A digital rebel. The Digiteur defies convention with a fully mechanical display of jumping hours, digital minutes and seconds - all without traditional hands. A tribute to early 20th-century digital displays, reimagined in pure mechanical form.

2018

ReSec

Modern Mechanical is born. The ReSec introduces the 3D regulator layout, retrograde seconds, and in-house guilloché craftsmanship - ushering in a new era of sculptural dial design and bold complication.

2025

Pulse One

A statement of strength. The Pulse One marks a new chapter as Chronoswiss' first titanium timepiece with integrated bracelet - precision-engineered for performance, design, and modern mechanical identity.

Milestones

in Mechanical Innovation

Since 1983, Chronoswiss has stood at the forefront of mechanical watchmaking. From launching the world’s first serially produced regulator wristwatch in 1987 to creating industry-first complications like the Delphis with its combination of digital, analog, and retrograde displays, Chronoswiss has built a reputation for innovation and craftsmanship.

Over the decades, Chronoswiss has introduced a series of technical milestones - including the first automatic skeleton chronograph, the iconic Timemaster crown, and hand-guilloché regulator watches with retrograde seconds. Each timepiece represents a breakthrough in function, form, or both. Chronoswiss watches shaped not only the brand, but also left a mark on modern mechanical watchmaking.

Chronoswiss

in modern times

In 2012, Chronoswiss entered a new era. The Swiss entrepreneur Oliver Ebstein and his family took the reins, relocating the brand to Lucerne and reimagining its future while preserving its soul. From our Atelier in Lucerne, we craft each timepiece in small, exclusive batches — combining mechanical heritage with contemporary execution. The DNA set by Lang still defines us, but we now shape it with three-dimensional dials, innovative materials, and architectural design. Chronoswiss remains a maison of mechanical mastery — unmistakable, modern, and fiercely independent.

Milestones

in Chronoswiss history

  • 1983 - Brand founded by Gerd-Rüdiger Lang in Munich, Germany
  • 1987 - Launch of the Régulateur
  • 1995 - Opus debuts as first serially produced skeleton chronograph
  • 2012 - Brand acquired by Oliver Ebstein and moved to Lucerne, Switzerland
  • 2014 - Establishment of in-house Guilloché & Enameling Atelier
  • 2023 - Introduction of new manufacture calibers & launch of Delphis Oracle

Modern mechanical

Innovation and Heritage

Chronoswiss doesn’t imitate tradition — we evolve it. Every timepiece begins with a mechanical heart, then takes form through sculptural dials, in-house hand-guilloché, layered constructions or fire enamel techniques mastered in Lucerne. We pair this artisanal depth with modernity: bold regulator displays, advanced case coatings, and expressive colors that define our design language. Modern Mechanical is not a slogan — it's our philosophy. Because true innovation happens not by abandoning the past, but by daring it forward.

At Chronoswiss, we combine the depth of traditional mechanical watchmaking with a bold, contemporary design language — crafted in limited numbers at our Atelier in the heart of Lucerne. We don’t repeat the past; we reimagine it for the modern collector.

Oliver Ebstein, Owner & CEO of Chronoswiss

Quick facts

about Chronoswiss

  • Founded: 1983, Munich
  • Headquarters: Lucerne, Switzerland
  • Ownership: Family-owned (Oliver Ebstein)
  • Signature Features: Onion Crown, Coin Edge Bezel & Straight Lugs
  • Manufacture: In-house assembly / Guilloché & Enameling Atelier
  • Philosophy: Modern Mechanical
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