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A STUDY IN FORM AND COLOUR: THE PIAGET PERSPECTIVE

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14 Apr 2026 · 11 min read

At Watches and Wonders 2026, Piaget does not simply revisit its past; it sharpens it. The Maison’s latest creations reveal a sustained commitment to a singular idea that has defined its identity for decades: the dissolution of boundaries between watchmaking and jewellery. What emerges is not a broad survey of novelties, but a focused continuation of a design language rooted in the late 1960s and 1970s, when Piaget first transformed the act of reading time into an expressive, tactile experience.


Across the new Piaget Polo, Sixtie, and Swinging Pebbles, one observes a consistent thread. Form is never subordinate to function, and material is never merely decorative. Instead, shape, texture, and colour become the primary vehicles for conveying time. This year, Piaget refines these ideas, paying particular attention to surface treatment, mineral dials, and sculptural presence.

The Piaget Polo
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The Piaget Polo 79 in steel, where the gadroon bracelet flows seamlessly into a dial now enhanced with ornamental stone

The Piaget Polo remains one of the clearest articulations of the Maison’s philosophy, and in 2026 it is revisited with a heightened emphasis on its most recognisable signature: gadroons. These horizontal ridges are not ornamental in a superficial sense. They define the architecture of the watch, shaping the interaction between light and surface while reinforcing the continuity between case and bracelet.


Originally introduced in 1979 as a bold alternative to the prevailing steel sports watch, the Polo was conceived as an object where bracelet and watch were inseparable. Yves G. Piaget famously described it as a bracelet that happens to tell the time, an idea that continues to resonate in the latest iterations.

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A contemporary Piaget Polo in varying sizes, combining gadroon dials with interchangeable bracelet and strap options

For 2026, this identity is sharpened through the introduction of ornamental stone dials, most notably sodalite. The deep blue mineral, with its natural veining, introduces visual complexity that contrasts with the disciplined geometry of the gadroons. The result is a tension between structure and spontaneity, between engineered precision and the unpredictability of natural material.


The expansion of gadroons across the dial itself further intensifies this interplay. No longer confined to the case or bracelet, the motif becomes a unifying language across the entire surface. This extension transforms the dial into an active participant in the design, rather than a passive backdrop.

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The Piaget Polo 79 sodalite dial highlights the horizontal gadroons that define the bracelet and case
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The Piaget Polo Date in steel pairs a blue gadroon dial with an interchangeable rubber strap
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A gem-set Piaget Polo in steel, where the gadroon dial is paired with diamond-set details
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A 36 mm Piaget Polo with a diamond-set bezel and gadroon dial, paired with a beige rubber strap
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A Piaget Polo Date with a silver-toned gadroon dial, accented by a khaki green interchangeable rubber strap

At the same time, the collection evolves through variations in scale, material, and configuration. The introduction of both gem-set and non-set versions, alongside interchangeable straps and bracelets, suggests a deliberate attempt to maintain versatility without diluting identity. The Polo remains anchored in its original concept, yet it adapts with a clarity that avoids nostalgia.

The Sixtie Revisited
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A blue quartz dial defines this Sixtie, its natural marbled texture framed by a gadroon-engraved pink gold case and matched with a deep blue alligator strap

The Sixtie is perhaps the most direct expression of Piaget’s archival dialogue. Its trapezoidal case, drawn from late 1960s experimentation, carries with it the spirit of what was once described as the “Swinging Sixties”, a period defined by bold shapes and liberated design.


What distinguishes the 2026 iteration is not a radical redesign, but a careful recalibration. The introduction of deep blue tones, both in the strap and the dial, reframes the Sixtie within a more contemporary palette while preserving its historical proportions. The gadroons that trace the bezel are rendered with particular attention, each line individually engraved to create a subtle rhythm across the surface.

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The Piaget Sixtie in pink gold features a trapezoidal case with engraved gadroons, paired with a silvered dial and deep blue alligator strap

Two dial executions define the collection. The first, a silvered surface with Roman numerals, offers clarity and restraint. The second, in blue quartz, introduces a markedly different character. The stone’s marbled texture ensures that no two examples are identical, reinforcing Piaget’s longstanding fascination with individuality through material.


The decision to pair these dials with an alligator strap rather than a full metal bracelet is significant. It shifts the emphasis from overt presence to nuanced detail, allowing the case shape and dial material to take precedence. In doing so, the Sixtie becomes less about statement and more about composition, a study in proportion, colour and surface.

Swinging Pebbles
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A trio of Swinging Pebbles pendants in pietersite, tiger’s eye. and verdite, each carved from a single stone and designed to move freely on twisted gold chains

With Swinging Pebbles, Piaget extends its exploration of form into a more sculptural dimension. Inspired by the Swinging Sautoirs of the 1970s, these creations reimagine the watch as a pendant, suspended and in motion, rather than fixed to the wrist.


The defining feature is the pebble-shaped case, carved from a single piece of ornamental stone. Each example, whether in tiger’s eye, verdite, or pietersite, is hollowed to accommodate the movement before being sealed into a smooth, continuous form. This integration of case and dial into a single material creates a sense of unity that is both visual and tactile.

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Swinging Pebbles Tiger's Eye
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Swinging Pebbles Pietersite
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Swinging Pebbles Verdite

The gold chain from which each pendant is suspended plays an equally important role. Its twisted construction allows it to catch light and move fluidly, reinforcing the idea that time is not static but kinetic. As the piece shifts with the wearer, the act of reading time becomes intertwined with movement.


This approach reflects a broader philosophy articulated by Piaget since the late 1960s: time as an experience rather than a measurement. The Swinging Pebbles embody this idea with clarity, presenting the watch as an object that engages the senses through touch, motion and form.


At the same time, the collection demonstrates technical discipline. Integrating a movement within a carved stone case requires careful engineering, ensuring durability without compromising the organic quality of the material. The result is a balance between spontaneity and control, between natural form and mechanical precision.

Ongoing Dialogue Between Design and Time


Piaget’s novelties at Watches and Wonders 2026 reveal a Maison that is not interested in expansion for its own sake. Instead, it chooses to deepen its core ideas, refining a vocabulary that has been in development for over half a century. Across the Piaget Polo, Sixtie, and Swinging Pebbles, a consistent narrative emerges. Shape is expressive, material is integral, and the distinction between jewellery and watchmaking is deliberately blurred.


The focus is not on complication or excess, but on the relationship between form, surface and movement. In an industry often driven by novelty, Piaget’s approach feels considered. It is a continuation rather than a departure, a careful evolution of principles that remain as relevant today as they were in the 1960s. Through this lens, the 2026 collection stands not as a series of isolated releases but as a coherent statement of intent.

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