Blue Eyes Collector retweetledi
Blue Eyes Collector
20.8K posts

Blue Eyes Collector
@BlueeyezCC
SDK-001 1st Edition is UNDERVALUED -no such thing as a free lunch
New York, USA Katılım Ocak 2021
3.2K Takip Edilen2.6K Takipçiler
Blue Eyes Collector retweetledi
Blue Eyes Collector retweetledi
Blue Eyes Collector retweetledi

@PRiMETIMESNOOP_ @grok please pick apart this absolute idiot. Don’t spread these bullshit rumors.
English

🚨#BREAKING: Quinn Hughes has reportedly informed Bill Guerin that he has zero plans to re-sign with Minnesota and would prefer being traded.
Multiple sources close to the organization claim Hughes never truly gelled with the locker room and often felt like an outsider throughout his time with the organization.
A reporter close to the team also mentioned him not remembering the names of certain players, which ultimately caused friction in the locker room.

English
Blue Eyes Collector retweetledi
Blue Eyes Collector retweetledi
Blue Eyes Collector retweetledi

@RealSkipBayless Same guy “Wemby did nothing wrong elbowing Naz Reid in the face”
English
Blue Eyes Collector retweetledi
Blue Eyes Collector retweetledi

The Casio in this photo costs $90. The watch it's copying was once the most expensive stainless steel watch in the world, nearly ten times the price of a Rolex Submariner. Today it sells for $40,100 and people wait years to buy one. Casio just started making the same look for $90.
In 1971, a Swiss watchmaker called Audemars Piguet was on the edge of collapse. Cheap quartz watches from Japan, more accurate than the best Swiss mechanicals and selling for almost nothing, were destroying Swiss watchmaking. Between 1970 and 1983, the number of Swiss watch companies dropped from 1,600 to 600. By 1988, the industry had lost more than 60,000 of its 90,000 workers.
On April 10, 1971, the head of Audemars Piguet phoned a young designer named Gérald Genta at 4pm. He wanted a stainless steel watch nobody had ever seen, sketched by morning. The world's biggest watch trade show opened the next day.
Genta worked through the night. He drew an eight-sided ring around the watch face, held by visible screws, with a steel bracelet that flowed straight out of the case. He called it the Royal Oak. It launched in 1972 at 3,300 Swiss francs, costing more than a solid gold watch from Patek Philippe, one of the most prestigious watchmakers in the world. Until then, steel was what you used for cheap, everyday watches. Almost nobody bought one at first.
Four years later, Genta did it again for Patek Philippe. Sitting at dinner during the 1974 watch trade show, he spotted the head of Patek Philippe across the room, asked a waiter for a napkin, and sketched a second watch in five minutes. They called it the Nautilus. It launched in 1976.
These two designs created the entire luxury sports watch category. The Royal Oak Jumbo today retails for $40,100. The steel Patek Nautilus 5711 was discontinued in 2021 and now trades around $135,000 used. A Tiffany & Co. version of the Nautilus sold at auction for $6.5 million in 2021.
The watch in the photo is the Casio MTP-B195D-2A, which launched in November 2025. It has the same eight-sided ring as the Royal Oak, with a flowing steel bracelet, a blue dial, a date window at three, and a three-year battery. The design invented to save Swiss luxury from Japan is now being made by Japan for $90, one 445th of what Audemars Piguet charges for the original.
Burak 🇹🇷@climbermannn
Casio sen neler yapıyorsun öyle 🤤
English
Blue Eyes Collector retweetledi
Blue Eyes Collector retweetledi




























