The Dialogues Edition is a space where time acquires a voice of its own. A collection created to celebrate rich Mexican culture, recognizing that our country is not defined by a single root, but by the convergence of multiple worlds that together build identity.
In this edition, design becomes a bridge between visual traditions, ancestral symbols and ways of understanding time that have lived in Mexico for centuries. Here, each watch stops being an object and becomes an encounter: a silent dialogue between ancient geometries, historic arts and cosmic visions that have shaped our land.
Dialogues is born as a living repository. A concept prepared to host multiple models, each one interpreting a different aspect of Mexico’s vast cultural heritage: its colors, its patterns, its spirituality, its way of seeing the world.
It is an edition for those who feel proud of their roots. For those who understand that time does not only move forward… it converses.
A watch where three worlds of Mexico converge.
The Cobalto model is built from the encounter between three cultural universes that shaped the soul of Mexico: Oaxaca, Puebla and the Mayan world. Each one contributes not only aesthetics, but a worldview. A way of understanding life, time and the human spirit. Cobalto is not inspired by decorations… it is inspired by worldviews.
In Oaxaca, Zapotec culture conceived a universe where each person is born accompanied by a tona or nahual: a protective entity linked to an animal that symbolizes strength, destiny, energy and character. This idea —that human beings and nature are united by a spiritual bond— became the conceptual basis that inspired an entire aesthetic: Tonas Wood, The Watch of Mexico. Each greca is a fragment of the Zapotec philosophy on identity and spirit.
- Iluit — Infinity
- Butterfly — Happiness
- Wings — Freedom
- Mountain — Greatness
- Coyote — Observation
- Ant — Work
- Temple — Adoration
The grecas carefully hand-painted on the strap and case represent symbols such as infinity, freedom, happiness and observation. Each greca, from the butterfly that symbolizes happiness to the mountain that evokes greatness, transforms time into a symbolic dialogue.
Talavera from Puebla is one of the most refined legacies of cultural mestizaje in Mexico. Its history is born from the encounter between:
- the Indigenous tradition of working with clay,
- the Arab techniques of potters who crossed the Mediterranean,
- the Spanish methods of glazing and kilns,
- and the New Spanish sensitivity for symmetry and ornamentation.
From this union a unique art emerged: ceramics in deep blue and pure white, where each stroke is an act of aesthetic discipline. Talavera is not just craftsmanship. It is testimony to how different cultures can create something sublime together. Cobalt blue became a symbol of elegance, devotion and permanence. That is why Cobalto adopts it as its foundational color: a direct tribute to this history of mixture, dialogue and Mexican identity. Its blue is not just a color… it is a legacy.
The Mayan numeral system is one of the most advanced systems that has existed in the Americas. Based on dots and bars, this system was not only mathematical: it was astronomical, spiritual and cyclical. The Maya did not count time; they interpreted it.
Numeration was a way of understanding the order of the universe. By integrating Mayan numbers into the dial, Cobalto connects the wearer with a civilization that understood time as a reflection of the cosmos. Each number is a gateway to the idea that time is not linear, but cyclical, eternal and connected to the sky.
Three worlds. Three visions of time. A hand-painted wooden piece where they all meet. Cobalto is not only worn on the wrist: it is carried as identity, as history, as cultural legacy.