Mechanical Poetry: Where Engineering Meets Dragon Mythology - Yanko Design
Briefly

Mechanical Poetry: Where Engineering Meets Dragon Mythology - Yanko Design
"Your wrist becomes a stage when mythical creatures guard rotating astronomical displays. The Jacob & Co Astronomia Solar Dragon transforms timekeeping into sculpture, where hand-carved dragons protect a miniature solar system that never stops moving. Designer: Jacob & Co This 44mm masterpiece shrinks Jacob & Co's dragon obsession into wearable art. Previous models stretched to 50mm, making them conversation pieces for collectors with NBA player wrists."
"The hand-wound caliber JCAM42 movement comprises 296 precisely engineered components arranged in vertical architecture to maximize visual impact. Unlike previous Astronomia movements that rotated as complete units, the Solar Dragon's caliber remains stationary to preserve the sculptural dragon display. Three mechanical arms radiate from the center like celestial satellites. A one-minute flying tourbillon provides the hypnotic rhythm that defines the Astronomia collection. The skeletonized time display, crafted in matching rose gold or black DLC titanium, floats independently while maintaining perfect readability."
"Rose gold and black titanium cases showcase dragons that took master engravers weeks to perfect. Each scale, each claw receives microscopic attention. The creatures appear supernatural - coiled within millimeters of mechanical arms that rotate beneath them. At $200,000+, this represents horological theater at its most exclusive level. Mechanical Poetry: Where Engineering Meets Dragon Mythology The hand-wound caliber JCAM42 movement comprises 296 precisely engineered components arranged in vertical architecture to maximize visual impact."
The Jacob & Co Astronomia Solar Dragon is a 44mm wristwatch that merges sculptural engraving and astronomical complications. Rose gold and black titanium cases house hand-carved dragons produced by master engravers over weeks. The hand-wound JCAM42 movement contains 296 components in a vertical architecture and remains stationary to highlight the sculptural elements. Three radial arms present a one-minute flying tourbillon, a skeletonized time display, and a magnesium Earth globe that completes a rotation every minute. The movement runs at 28,800 vibrations per hour and offers a 48-hour power reserve. The piece retails above $200,000.
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