Hi everyone! We're hard at work trying to keep our community clean, so if you see any spam, please report it here and we'll review ASAP!  Thanks a million!
2,331 Users Online
  • 206,081,782 Downloads
  • 1,871,596 Wallpapers
  • 6,933,465 Members
  • 14,834,768 Votes
  • 7,291,060 Favorites
Upload Wallpapers
Downloads: 206,081,782
All Wallpapers: 1,871,596
Tag Count: 356,266
Comments: 2,140,956
Members: 6,933,465
Votes: 14,834,768

2,330 Guests and 1 Member Online:
bckj44

Most users ever online was 19580 on 12/21/25.
Get your weekly helping of fresh wallpapers!

Leave us feedback!
Support This Site
Journal for ctrwatchesreplicav Journal for ctrwatchesreplicav
Mar
4
Monkey
wasn’t surprised when Harry told me about how limited Tank production was pre-1965, but it’s stark when you consider that, between the years of 1919-1965, there were only 2,200 pieces produced in total. After this time period, production would ramp up to 10,000 pieces annually and only grow from there. There is something uniquely [B][URL=https://www.ctrwatches.com/]Replica Cartier watches[/URL][/B] romantic about Cartier pieces from this early era when holding and wearing them, thinking about streets in Paris from a world long gone.
It would be prohibitive to go through each of the remaining 34 vintage Cartiers, but I did want to discuss a few that stood out to me. Ironically, one that I initially couldn’t take my eyes off wasn’t a Tank model, rather a stainless steel chronograph that dates back to 1950. Admittedly, I’d never seen one of these before, which is a bit surprising, though I can’t imagine more than a handful of these were ever produced.
A “Cartier Reverso” combines the [B][URL=https://www.ctrwatches.com/replica-cartier-drive-silver-dial-alligator-strap-wsnm0008/]replica Cartier Drive Silver Dial Alligator Strap WSNM0008[/URL][/B] Cartier Tank with the Jaeger-LeCoultre Reverso (JLC produced all their movements back in the day) in a gold and steel piece that dates to 1947. Note that this is not the Cartier Tank Basculante, which was Cartier’s own take on the reversible dial watch in a rectangular case.
The Tank is most often associated with the rectangular case, and there are several of these at Fane’s exhibit. A Cartier Tank “Gondole” from the 1970s has a stepped gold case and is quite reminiscent of the Patek Ellipse. However, a Ceinture Automatique, also from the 1970s, has a “belt buckle” case shape with crown protector that I can’t help but love largely due to the fact that it’s in white gold, which you don’t see often.