Most independent watchmakers begin their careers in Switzerland, surrounded by suppliers, master craftsmen, and centuries of accumulated knowledge. Reuben Schoots started in a Canberra garage with George Daniels' book and no one to ask for help. The challenges extended beyond isolation. Australia has no watchmaking infrastructure—no nearby suppliers, no tradition of manufacture, no community of independent makers working through similar problems. Schoots sources second-hand machinery internationally, machines his own components, and has spent years solving problems that Swiss watchmakers never encounter, like preventing thermal expansion in a 1970s garage where summer temperatures make precision work impossible without extreme climate control.
His motto, "for those who care," reflects a unique relationship with collectors built on radical transparency. Working without traditional atelier training, Schoots has developed his methods through pure determination and iterative refinement. For collectors who value this honest, craft-driven approach over institutional pedigree, Schoots offers something increasingly rare: watchmaking as pure problem-solving, unfiltered by inherited dogma.
From Series 1 to Series 2, the evolution is visible—not just aesthetically, but in complexity and ambition. He estimated doubling the workload per watch. The reality was closer to three times. But this accumulation of skills drives him forward: the horrible feeling when something doesn't work, followed by the knowledge that solving it once makes the next attempt significantly easier. It's problem-solving as craft, learned from Daniels' book but executed in complete independence. After years building his workshop and capabilities, Schoots has reached a point where he can finally spend most of his time at the bench rather than on infrastructure. For a watchmaker working at the end of the world, that represents a different kind of freedom.














