Breitling Callisto Ref B77346 a lady's stainless steel and gold bracelet watch with date purchased 2004. Dial: engraved black dial, applied gilt Arabic and baton hour markers, date aperture at 3. Calibre: quartz. Case: polished tonneau-shaped, ratcheted uni-directional calibrated bezel with gold riders, screw down case back. Case number: 563964. Closure: Breitling stainless steel rouleaux link bracelet and folding clasp. Dimensions: 34 mm diameter, bracelet circumference approximately 143 mm. Signed: case, dial and movement. Accessories: Breitling Attestation de Chronometre no. 563964, interantional warranty booklet dated 18 June 2004, user's manual, service pamphlet, Breitling service papers dated 29.09.2008, swing tag, four addtional links and Bakelite presentation box
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- Date Aperture - A date aperture is a cut out section in the face of a watch or clock, displaying the day of the month.
- Bezel - On a clock or watch, the bezel is the metal frame into which the watch or clock glass is fitted. In clocks, the bezel may include a hinge and a flange, in effect a door to the face of the clock. In jewellery the bezel is a band of metal with a projecting lip that holds the gemstone in its setting.
- Bakelite - Bakelite was the first completely synthetic man-made substance. Bakelite was invented in 1909 by an independent New York chemist Leo H. Baekeland. It was called the "material of a thousand uses" and used to make everything from car parts to jewellery.
Although nearly all plastic from this period is known as ?Bakelite', it is important to remember that this is an umbrella term that covers many different early plastics such as Lucite and cellulose acetate, and includes Bakelite.
We often think of the colour of Bakelite items as dark brown, but it was manufactured in various colours including yellow, butterscotch, red, green and brown.
Bakelite could also be transparent, or marbleised by mixing two colours. Plastics were cheap to produce and could be moulded or carved in a huge variety of ways.
Bakelite is most commonly associated with radio cases of the 1930s, telephones and kitchen utensils, but it was also used extensively in jewellery manufacture.
Early designs from the 1920s were plainer and simpler than later examples. Geometric and floral patterns typical of Art Deco styling were popular.
During its heyday in the 1930s, Bakelite jewellery was stocked by the most prestigious stores, such as Saks, Harrods and Macy?s, who dedicated a shop window display to it in 1935.
Coco Chanel featured Bakelite items in her accessories collection and the material was praised frequently in Vogue magazine.
Manufacture of some consumer Items were suspended in 1942 in order to concentrate manufacturing on the war effort.
Small items made of Bakelite are now valuable collectables. Andy Warhol was an avid collector, and when he died in 1987, his pieces sold for record prices at Sotheby's.
- Movement - The technical name for the workings of a clock or watch, and does not include the dial or case.
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