Photo: @tamara Instagram

There is a very specific kind of time that only exists in summer. Slower, golden, a little hedonistic. It is the kind of time that deserves something worthy on your wrist – a watch. A real one, because if you are going to track the hours drifting past on a terrace in Positano, or slipping by on the deck of a boat off the Côte d’Azur, they ought to be counted in style.

This season, the great Maisons have been paying attention. With that, GRAZIA has curated six timepieces that feel, in different ways, made for a European summer.

VACHERON CONSTANTIN EGERIE MOON PHASE SPRING BLOSSOM

VACHERON CONSTANTIN EGERIE MOON PHASE SPRING BLOSSOM
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Vacheron Constantin has been making watches since 1755. The Egerie Moon Phase Spring Blossom is proof that more than 270 years of practice can still produce a surprise. It is a limited edition of one hundred pieces. Each one, technically, different from the last. The calfskin strap is painted by hand with spring blossoms – the first time the Maison has applied this craft to a strap rather than a dial. Mother-of-pearl shifts in the light. No two hands ever paint quite the same. No two pieces are identical. The 37mm pink gold dial is pleated like a swirl of a couture skirt, its Arabic numerals curling like lace. Between one and three o’clock, a gold moon tracks the lunar cycle behind clouds of mother-of-pearl against a dusky pink sky, within a ring of diamonds. The crown is set with a moonstone.

Two additional straps come with it – shiny pink alligator and blush pink grosgrain – and none require tools to change. In practice: one watch, the whole day. The moon phase is for the evening. The long European ones that begin at dinner and end considerably later than anyone planned.

CHANEL PREMIERE RIBBON RED WATCH

CHANEL PREMIERE RIBBON RED WATCH
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Red. Not blush, not rose, not a colour that compromises. The dial is red lacquered sunray, and the strap matches it exactly. Red rubber, with a velvet touch, fastened with an 18-carat yellow gold ardillon buckle. The case is yellow gold and titanium. The crown is set with a brilliant-cut diamond.

At 19.7 by 15.2 millimetres, it is one of the smallest watches in this edit. It is also the one you will notice first. The red sees to that. The gold sees to that. The velvet touch strap against a summer tan sees to that.

Water resistant to 30 metres. It will survive the afternoon by the pool, the walk back along the harbour, the aperitivo that turns into dinner. What it will not do, at any point during the evening that follows, is go unnoticed. Some watches tell you the time. This one tells you something else entirely.

AUDEMARS PIGUET ROYAL OAK

AUDEMARS PIGUET ROYAL OAK
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The Royal Oak needs no introduction. Gerald Genta’s octagonal case, eight hexagonal screws – fifty-four years old and still the silhouette everyone is chasing. For 2026, Audemars Piguet made one edit that changes everything: the dial is natural malachite.

Not printed. Not painted. Malachite, cut from stone, polished until it gleams. The swirling greens are geological. The 41mm case and integrated bracelet are 18-carat yellow gold throughout, closing with a three-blade folding clasp. Yellow gold hands and hour-markers, luminescent for the evenings. Water resistant to 50 metres.

Wear it off the boat in Portofino. Wear it to dinner the same evening. It goes wherever the summer goes, and it looks considerably better doing it.

BVLGARI SERPENTI TUBOGAS CAPSULE

BVLGARI SERPENTI TUBOGAS CAPSULE
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The Serpenti has coiled around Bvlgari wrists since the 1940s. It has never looked quite

like this. The Serpenti Tubogas Studs Capsule brings three of the Maison’s icons into one piece: the Serpenti, the Tubogas, and the stud. The stud is new to the watch – a pyramidal motif pulled from Bvlgari’s jewellery archives, its facets each set with three brilliant-cut diamonds, punctuating the curves of the bracelet like something between armour and art. The Tubogas technique, a precise winding of fine metal bands that became a hallmark of the Maison in the 1970s, gives it that coiling, fluid movement. It doesn’t fasten. It coils, and finds you.

Four limited editions. One in full yellow gold with a carnelian dial, as warm as the Mediterranean in August. The other three work in Gold & Steel, bi-colour and bold, with mother-of-pearl, sodalite, or malachite. Each shade, in its own way, borrowed from the sea.

ROLEX OYSTER PERPETUAL 36

ROLEX OYSTER PERPETUAL 36
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Rolex did not need to do this. The Oyster Perpetual 36 was already a classic. Its new multicoloured lacquer dial in the Jubilee motif makes it the only watch you would like on your wrist on the Amalfi Coast.

The Jubilee motif dates to the end of the 1970s, displaying the letters of the Rolex name in no fewer than ten colours, each applied to the dial one after the other in sequence, with a precision that sounds exhausting and looks extraordinary in sunlight. The 36mm Oystersteel case is waterproof to 100 metres, which means it can go wherever your summer takes you – off a boat, into the sea, back to the table without a second thought. The Calibre 3230 movement, developed entirely by Rolex, has a power reserve of approximately 70 hours, and the Oyster bracelet’s Easylink comfort extension adjusts the fit by 5mm. Which matters considerably more than you would anticipate when the heat arrives.

Pack it first. It is the watch that takes you from the water to dinner, without skipping a beat.

CARTIER BAIGNOIRE

CARTIER BAIGNOIRE
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The Baignoire is Cartier’s oval – the watch that looks least like a watch. The 2026 edition leans into exactly that: the Clou de Paris motif adding rhythm and structure, the stone-setting doing the rest, every piece polished by hand.

The result is a watch that wears like jewellery. For European summer evenings, the kind that begin with a change of clothes and end when the sun rises – that is exactly the point. Dinner in Cannes. A gallery opening in Paris. The wrist bare of everything else.

Words by Isabella Stanley