Czapek adds to their impressive repertoire with a new model, with a new in-house caliber 10 movement, released to celebrate the 10th anniversary of the revived brand. We attended the celebrations in Geneva today for the reveal of the Time Jumper in Geneva. And will bring you exclusive in-situ photographs and videos soon.
Press Release information with commentary in italics.
New: Czapek Time Jumper – 10th anniversary caliber 10
The Czapek Time Jumper retails at CHF 42,000 for the steel model and CHF 64,000 for the gold model. Both prices are before taxes. Limited Edition of 100 pieces each.

Commentary
This novelty has a very interesting concept. The case is a hand guilloché half hunter metal cover, with a large opening in center to reveal a jumping hour with big digits. I had several discussions with Xavier de Roquemaurel, CEO of Czapek during my manufacture visit last year. One of the options considered then was a rather large cyclops like magnifying glass. But they settled for a more subtle one for this release. The cover is pierced in the center to accommodate said glass, and also features an opening in the form of an arc, to show the en-passant minutes. No seconds hand is shown.

From the dial side, the texture of the guilloché can be enjoyed, as it is “naked”, and can be felt as one runs one’s finger over the surface. As usual, Czapek reveals the partners delivering the non-inhouse components. AB Concepts which we visited in the supplier episode makes the beautiful case and Metalem makes the guillochè.

A small, smooth oval shaped button at the 6 o’clock position releases the hunter cover to reveal a view of the complex puzzle which when masked by the apertures of the cover show only the center jumping seconds and the trailing minutes.

This jumping display is the most prominent element on the face of the dial, and takes one’s breath away when encountering the watch for the first time Then the other elements make their presence known. The smooth shape of the case becomes clear and the guilloché as is felt as much as is seen impresses. And then, the en-passant minutes becomes into view and the fact that the watch does not show a seconds hand. .

The movement finishing is at the usual Czapek level, which is typically very high, and consistent with the haute horlogerie level in which the brand and this anniversary watch is pitched at.

As we attended the reveal in Geneva in person, we will bring you a more comprehensive and detailed review of the watch soon, with our own photographs as well as some videos.

Release details
THE TIME JUMPER
10 FOR 10: CZAPEK & CIE CELEBRATES ITS 10th ANNIVERSARY WITH CALIBRE 10
Geneva, November 2025 – Celebrating a decade since the revival of the Maison’s name, Czapek trips back to the future with the Time Jumper, powered by the new in-house Calibre 10. A new twist on traditional guillochage decorates the futuristic form of its 40.5mm steel case and the half-hunter cover plays hide-and-seek with the time indication and the open-worked movement that drives it. Released as a limited edition of 100 pieces in stainless steel and 30 in 3N 18-carat gold, the watch will be unveiled at a 10th birthday celebration that will gather Czapek’s Rare People from all over the world in Geneva on November 12.
Reimagining the pocket watches created by François Czapek in the 19th century in playful, avant-garde style, the watch is centred on a jumping hour complication displaying 24 hours on two discs (a première with a patent-pending mechanism) and complemented by trailing minutes on a peripheral ring. On the half-hunter cover, a new, threedimensional guilloché pattern creates the optical illusion of a black hole, its event horizon taking the form of a loupe in the centre that reveals the open-worked complication. Flipping the cover open unveils the entire movement beneath a sapphire crystal glass.
“Our goal with the Time Jumper was to rethink the expression of time and bring something new and fresh to the table,” says CEO Xavier de Roquemaurel. “We have been keen to explore time indications without traditional hands and a jumping hour is one way to do that. However, the jumping hour displays that have been done until now tend to be quite similar and we wanted to express the complication in our own, different way.”
The result is an almost literal expression of Czapek’s ‘head in the sky, feet on the ground’ style of thinking: the former translated into a retro-futuristic ‘flying saucer’ case; the latter rooted in the traditional round shape derived from historic pocket watches.

Space Oddity: Calibre 10 and the Next Decade
For the 10th anniversary milestone, it might be assumed that Czapek would create a highly complicated calibre to show off its technical evolution and haute horlogerie credentials. However, given the delight it takes in going against the expected flow, Czapek chose simple functions – hours and minutes only, albeit with an unconventional display – to celebrate this first decade as a modern haute horlogerie house.

The conceptual genesis of Calibre 10 lay in the notion of exploring and dissolving the space-time continuum. The Maison’s previous nine calibres have been essentially traditional: contemporary reinterpretations of classical complications, expressing a modern Czapek style – philosophically, technically, visually – that has become increasingly recognisable over the past decade. Calibre 10, born from the desire to explore new timekeeping ‘space’ over the coming 10 years, has been designed as the foundation of a series of in-house movements that will host a wide variety of complications. Celebrating the true spirit of haute horlogerie, each evolution of Calibre 10 will be completely redesigned and re-engineered so that every complication is fully integrated – an entirely different philosophy from adding modular functions to a simple base, which is the standard approach in watchmaking driven by commercial or industrial optimisation.
To make this possible, the key criteria were that the movement should be self-winding, compact in both diameter and height – thus able to be housed in cases as small as 36mm in diameter – and with a highly adaptable architecture. As well as ensuring that every future iteration of the calibre will be aesthetically distinctive, this approach enhances mechanical efficiency – since conventional stacking of modules often increases friction, thus reducing both power reserve and precision.
“Elliott, that machine, what does it do?”
The starting point for the Calibre 10 architecture is a centrally mounted winding rotor in recycled 950 platinum, skeletonised to provide an unobstructed view of the movement. The overall design is harmonious and fluid – ‘very Czapek’ with its graceful curves, concentric circles and airy interplay of bridges, visually anchored by the strong, straight lines of the rotor’s ‘arms’, shaped like a geometry compass, which attach it to the central axis. The 5-spoke design of the wheels with their diamond-bevelled edges, an exclusive Czapek signature.

Calibre 10.1 – the first application of the Calibre 10 technical philosophy – combines the central jumping hours display on a 24-hour register, with trailing minutes on a rotating peripheral ring. The hours are marked on two sapphire discs – one for single digits, one for tens. With the flying saucer shape of the case suggesting an astronaut’s watch, a 24-hour register seemed a natural complication, as well as being a departure from the standard 12-hour register.
Haute horlogerie finishes, in combinations that have come to define Czapek’s signature aesthetic, add life and movement. The high shine of rhodium coated bridges contrasts with blackened plates to create a play of reflections and increase the sense of visual depth: light against the deep black of space. Traditional negative engraving on the winding rotor plays against the modernity of laser-engraved minutes and hours – the latter filled with Super-Luminova.
Representing another stage in Czapek’s technical evolution, Calibre 10.1 was not only designed, conceived and assembled in-house, but also machined 75% in-house. This is not to suggest that Czapek is striving for full vertical integration. The principle of établissage is a fundamental value that it will always defend. However, greater in-house capabilities allow agility and freedom: the ability to produce elements internally while also choosing and collaborating with the best specialist partners in any given area.
Beam Me Up, Scotty
Given the conceptual notion of dissolving the space-time continuum, a techno-futuristic habillage was the natural visual expression – hence the flying saucer shape, popularised by science fiction of the mid- to late-20th century (a topic fascinating to Xavier between the ages of 11 and 18 – as it was to many boys growing up at that time). The traditional round shape and half-hunter case loop back to the form of pocket watches and the 19th-century genesis of today’s Czapek. However, Czapek’s design partner for the project, Thomas Funder, has used curves and angles to express that tradition in a different and less-expected way. A key design element – also present in earlier Czapek watches – is the tension between balance and imbalance, symmetry and asymmetry, beauty and strangeness.
“We wanted an avant-garde and uncompromising design without being extreme – different from other Czapek models yet a clear expression of the brand’s signature elements and aesthetic codes,” explains Xavier.
The design was led by the jumping hour display, which determined the form and style of the minutes. These had to be in a guichet or aperture – hence the half-hunter idea, which in turn created an ideal canvas for guillochage. With the cover closed, all eyes are on the hour indication – under the bubble-shaped loupe in the centre of the case (the flying saucer cockpit), which is set directly over the dial crystal. With the cover open, the full reveal of the mechanism and the complications is there to understand and enjoy.

Straight lines and flat planes are almost non-existent. The case, produced by Czapek’s partner AB Concept, is as smooth as a pebble – and as aerodynamic as a spacecraft. Soft curves are present in every detail: the oval-shaped button to release the case cover, the polished and rounded ends of the lugs, the rounded crown with the notches required for grip half-hidden close to the case. Straight edges have been minimised even on the strap buckle.
The guilloché pattern on the case cover adds another visual layer. Czapek’s longstanding partner Metalem, which has been evolving the once-lost savoir-faire of guillochage in new ways, had proposed a new pattern that proved to be perfect for this piece and is now exclusive to Czapek. An evolution of the vortex-like Singularité guilloché created for the Antarctique Tourbillon, it creates the optical illusion of curves being drawn into a deep centre.
Completing the space-time story, the Time Jumper’s presentation box also takes the form of a flying saucer made of aluminium with a sandblasted finish and tiny polished details.
Czapek will produce only 180 pieces of Calibre 10.1 movements, to celebrate the 180th anniversary since the original founding of the maison in Geneva in 1845. The Time Jumper will be first introduced with a limited edition of 100 pieces in stainless steel and 30 pieces in 3N 18-carat gold. The rest of the calibres will be used for special projects, including an allocation of 10 bespoke pieces – that can be ordered immediately by contacting the Czapek boutique.
The Time Jumper will be unveiled on the 12th of November 2025 in Geneva during a gathering of media, collectors, partners and friends of the Czapek community, and will be available on order at the Czapek boutique in Geneva at 18 rue de la Corraterie, at authorised Czapek dealers worldwide, and at Czapek.com.
Czapek Time Jumper Specifications
40.5mm stainless steel case, in-house self-winding jumping hour Calibre 10.1 movement. Limited Edition of 100 pieces
FUNCTIONS – Jumping hours & trailing minutes
CASE – Handmade three-dimensional guillochage * Material: stainless steel case OR 3N 18k yellow gold & white gold guilloche inlay – Jewels: 44 – Sapphire crystal glass-box with anti-reflective treatment – Water resistance: 3 atm * Diameter: 40.5mm – – Lug tip to lug tip (12h to 6h): 42.4mm – Height: 6.13 mm – Height: 10.5mm without magnifying crystal, – 12.35mm with crystal – Cover opening pusher at 6 o’clock
MOVEMENT – Calibre 10.01: Diameter: 30 mm – 13 lines ¼ Czapek’s in house self-winding with registered motif mechanical movement — Number of parts: 275 – Power-reserve: 60 hours on one single barrel – Swiss lever escapement, variable-inertia balance fitted with four gold inertia-blocks – Sapphire crystal glass-box case back with anti-reflective treatment on the inner side – Frequency: 4 Hz – 28800 VpH – Power winding system: recycled platinum – – Swiss lever escapement, variable-inertia mass
BRACELET Blue rubber strap * Lug to lug: 19mm * 18mm stainless steel pin buckle
FINISH Sandblasted & circular brushed rhodium-plated bridges, bevelling * New exclusive wheels design, circular brushing & bevelling * SLN sapphire hours and minutes discs * Minutes disc laser coloured in blue & texturized * Black polished springs