Elshan Tang of Zelos Watches
has been very busy indeed. If you recall, after the wildly successful
Helmsman project and the launch of the awesome Abyss, he brought us the
Chroma and Skeleton, two variants of a modern dress/casual watch that
absolutely shattered their Kickstarter funding goals. Those watches are
now finding their way to lucky backers and new purchasers alike, and a
black-on-black Chroma found its way to my door step for this review.
The Chroma's lugless case, nearly sterile dial, and pencil hands all
echo the popular minimalist-modern fashion. "Oh boy," you may think,
"another minimalist Kickstarter watch. Like the world needs another one
of those. Let me just return to the home page and..." Wait! Believe me, I
understand your apathy, but you need to bear with me here. A talented
designer can pull off a modern minimalist dial and not make another
bland, cookie cutter watch. Elshan is one of those designers. You see,
it's all in the details.
Let's start with the face. We have a black dial, no numerals, no text,
no lume, and no date. The only adornment is the Zelos "Z" logo at the
top. So far, so good. Minimalism should be neither garish nor cluttered.
Now it starts to get fun. There is a delightful sun ray effect to the
surface, and the hours are marked by slots cut into the black rehaut,
revealing tan printing on the surface beneath. This color is repeated on
the index. The hands are polished, silver, and pencil shaped. The
second hand is a simple baton in a rose gold color, as is the applied
logo. That is it. The dial is simple and clean with some subtly clever
touches to keep things interesting without breaking the aesthetic. My
only criticism is that the minute and hour hands are completely flat,
and occasionally disappear if they don't catch a reflection. I don't
believe they detract from the design, but I think they would have added
more had they been peaked to create two distinct surfaces.
Moving to the case, we have a 42mm stainless steel cylinder, topped by a
sapphire crystal with anti reflective coating. It wears a matte black
PVD coating with touches of high gloss around the uppermost surface of
the angled bezel, and the top and bottom layers of the case. A series of
deep channels is sandwiched in between; another tasty detail that sets
the Chroma apart from the rest of the "mini-mods." The prominent screw
down crown grooved and signed. It operates easily and help bring the
Chroma's water resistance to 50 meters. Without lugs to transition from
case to strap, the Chroma appears tall, but in fact, its 11mm profile
will easily slip beneath a shirt cuff.
A sapphire display window offers a peek at the Miyota 8215 inside: 21
jewel automatic movement, 21.6k bph oscillation rate, power reserve of
over 40 hours. This is a workmanlike unit, and does not offer a
particularly fancy level of decoration. The cut away rotor planned on
the prototype did not make production. Instead, Zelos has added an
engraved, rose gold PVD rotor. The view may be more functional than
ornamental, but it fits the Chroma's character.
Pairing it with casual clothing is easy, but the dress aspect is harder
to see. The watch arrived on a matte black Crazy Horse strap with white
stitching. It is thick leather, 20mm wide, and does not taper. It looks
great on its own, but it seems a bit too rough-and-tumble for the
Chroma. After a quick root through my drawers, I came up with a lightly
padded, calf skin strap. It is slimmer and far more tailored than the
Crazy Horse, and the light brown leather paired beautifully with the
Chroma's rose gold and tan accents. With the new strap in place, the
Chroma looked right at home with coat and tie. If you decide to fit your
own, find one that does not taper, and accepts a flat tang. This will
allow you to fit the signed and sculpted Zelos buckle, which exhibits
the same attention to detail as the rest of the watch.
Finally, I have to say a few words
about the packaging because Zelos is one of the few companies that
actually ships its watches in something that adds value. The Chroma
arrived tucked inside a blue leather, two pocket watch roll. The roll is
protected by simple wooden box and is accompanied by a steel warranty
card. Considering the dozens of display boxes gathering dust in my
storage closet, a useful and attractive item like a leather watch roll
is definitely a bonus.
The Chroma sells for $299 on the Zelos site.
Pro: Sculpted case, cutaway markers.
Con: Strap seems out of character.
Sum: A refreshing twist on the modern minimalist theme. The Time Bum approves.
The Chroma sells for $299 on the Zelos site.
Pro: Sculpted case, cutaway markers.
Con: Strap seems out of character.
Sum: A refreshing twist on the modern minimalist theme. The Time Bum approves.
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