At Plan-les-Ouates, the familiar hum of watchmaking machinery gives way to unexpected sounds. In one corner, the rhythmic click of dual cranks turning in perfect synchronisation accompanies the rose engine's steady rotation, carving geometric patterns into precious metal with tolerances measured in microns. Nearby, an engraver hunches over a binocular microscope, one hand pushing a steel burin whilst the other rotates an engraver's ball—a leather-cushioned rotating clamp holding the metal.
These are the sounds of guilloché and engraving at Patek Philippe, where two of horology's most demanding decorative arts persist through methods unchanged for two centuries. The Rare Handcrafts collection emerges from this dedication to manual mastery, where each guilloché pattern and engraved motif represents hours of focused human attention operating at the edge of manual capability.

















