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Watches and Wonders 2026: Urwerk’s Unveils New UR-101 Diamond Sky

Urwerk revives its iconic UR-101 with the Diamond Sky at Watches and Wonders 2026, a 25-piece gem-set masterpiece blending wandering hours, avant-garde design, and celestial artistry

Urwerk revives its iconic UR-101 with the Diamond Sky at Watches and Wonders 2026, a 25-piece gem-set masterpiece blending wandering hours, avant-garde design, and celestial artistry

At Watches and Wonders 2026, where most brands arrive with polite updates and carefully measured evolutions, Urwerk does something rather different. It doesn’t tweak. It doesn’t refine. It doesn’t gently nudge the past into the present. Instead, it digs into its own history, finds something strange, brilliant, and slightly unhinged… and then turns the volume all the way up.

To understand the UR-101 Diamond Sky, one must first rewind to 1997, when Urwerk unveiled the original UR-101. Now, this was not a watch in the traditional sense. It did not politely point at the time with hands arranged in a circular dance. No, it dragged time across the dial. Literally. Using wandering hours displayed on rotating satellites, it traced the passage of time across a 180-degree arc, from left to right, like the sun making its daily journey across the sky. It was mechanical theatre. It was rebellious. And at the time, it was borderline outrageous. This was the watch that laid the foundation for everything Urwerk would become. The satellite display, the unconventional timekeeping, the refusal to obey the rules that everyone else seemed quite happy to follow. The UR-101 was not just a product. It was a manifesto.

Fast forward to today, and that manifesto has returned, albeit dressed for a rather more glamorous evening

Fast forward to today, and that manifesto has returned, albeit dressed for a rather more glamorous evening. The UR-101 Diamond Sky is, on paper, a revival. In reality, it is more of a reinterpretation, a reimagining of that original idea with a layer of cosmic extravagance that feels both excessive and entirely appropriate. Limited to just 25 pieces, this is not a watch that intends to blend in quietly. It is designed to shimmer, to provoke, and to remind everyone that timekeeping can, in fact, be a form of art.

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The case measures 41mm and is crafted from stainless steel, which might sound rather sensible until you realise what Urwerk has done to it. It is set with 214 responsibly sourced diamonds, all D-E-F in colour and VVS+ in clarity, totalling 1.63ct. Now, in most watches, diamonds are simply decoration, sprinkled about like glitter at a party. Here, they serve a purpose. Each stone is positioned at the intersection of a mechanically engraved geometric network, transforming the case into something resembling a celestial chart. Not a literal one, mind you. Urwerk does not follow existing constellations. It invents its own.

And this is where things become wonderfully philosophical. Because the UR-101 Diamond Sky does not merely tell time

And this is where things become wonderfully philosophical. Because the UR-101 Diamond Sky does not merely tell time. It stages it. The satellite display, carried over from the original UR-101, uses two rotating satellites to indicate the hours, while the minutes are read along a 180-degree arc. Time moves across the dial in a smooth, deliberate sweep, like a horizon shifting beneath a star-filled sky. It is less about precision in the traditional sense and more about perception. About how time feels rather than how it is measured.

The hour and minute markers are painted with Super-LumiNova, ensuring that this cosmic display remains legible even when the lights go out. Which is rather fitting, because this is a watch that feels most at home in the dark, where its diamond-studded surface can truly come alive. Powering this celestial spectacle is the self-winding calibre UR-1.01V, a movement that continues Urwerk’s tradition of mechanical eccentricity. It offers a 48-hour power reserve and is finished with a mix of snailing, sandblasting, and satin-brushing, along with chamfered screw heads that remind you this is still, at its core, a serious piece of horology. The movement features a solid, snailed carousel driving the wandering hours, reinforcing the brand’s signature approach to time display.

here is also a two-position crown located at 12 o’clock, because placing it anywhere else would be far too conventional

There is also a two-position crown located at 12 o’clock, because placing it anywhere else would be far too conventional, along with a two-position crown pusher on the caseback. It is these small details that reinforce the idea that Urwerk does not design watches in the traditional sense. It engineers experiences. Visually, the UR-101 Diamond Sky retains the DNA of its predecessor. The angular lugs, the crown at 12, the radical legibility, all remain intact. But now, they exist within a framework that plays with light and texture in a way that the original never attempted. The engraved steel surface contrasts beautifully with the brilliance of the diamonds, creating a dynamic interplay between shadow and sparkle. It is not merely decorative. It is deliberate.

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And then there is the strap, finished in textured white rubber with a black calfskin lining, secured by a steel pin buckle. It sounds simple, almost understated, but that is precisely the point. When the watch itself looks like a fragment of the night sky, restraint elsewhere is not just advisable. It is necessary. What makes the UR-101 Diamond Sky particularly fascinating is the way it bridges past and present. It is a direct descendant of Urwerk’s earliest creations, retaining the core elements that defined the brand from the very beginning.

Yet it also pushes those ideas into new territory, adding a layer of preciousness that does not dilute the concept but amplifies it

Yet it also pushes those ideas into new territory, adding a layer of preciousness that does not dilute the concept but amplifies it. This is not a watch designed to appeal to everyone. In fact, it is quite the opposite. It is for collectors who see watches not as static objects but as ideas in motion. People who appreciate that time can be expressed in ways that are unconventional, even slightly absurd, and all the more compelling because of it.

In a world where many watches strive for perfection through refinement and repetition, the UR-101 Diamond Sky takes a different approach. It embraces imperfection, asymmetry, and unpredictability. It creates its own constellation rather than following one that already exists. And that, ultimately, is what makes it so compelling. Because in the end, time is not just something we measure. It is something we experience. And the UR-101 Diamond Sky, with its wandering hours, its diamond-studded cosmos, and its unapologetically unconventional design, does not simply tell you what time it is.

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