Piaget Polo Adopts Perpetual Calendar in Ultra-thin Mode

Piaget Polo Adopts Perpetual Calendar in Ultra-thin Mode

Gabriel Pessoa
By Gabriel Pessoa February 10, 2023

The Iconic Piaget Polo reaches an all new level with the Piaget Polo Perpetual Calendar Ultra-thin powered by the 1255P caliber.

Piaget Polo Perpetual Calendar Ultra-thin

Photo Credit: Piaget

For the first time, the Piaget Polo collection offers a mechanical perpetual calendar – an emblematic complication in which Piaget has developed considerable expertise already deployed in some of its other watch lines.

Designed to advance the day, date, and year until the year 2100 – months, moon phases and leap- year cycle – it is easy to understand the natural attraction to perpetual calendar watches. For Piaget’s new 1255P ultra-thin 4 mm caliber, the Manufacture drew on the ultra-thin 1200P caliber with its extremely slimness and proven reliability, while adding an additional Perpetual Calendar with moon-phase mechanism.

For Piaget’s new 1255P ultra-thin 4 mm caliber, the Manufacture drew on the ultra-thin 1200P caliber with its extremely slimness and proven reliability, while adding an additional Perpetual Calendar with moon-phase mechanism. At just 8.65 mm thick overall, the new 42mm Piaget Polo Perpetual Calendar Ultra-thin brings the universe to the wrist while retaining the joyful highlife vibe flaunted by this fabulously festive and colorful collection.

Photo Credit: Piaget

Piaget’s new timepiece features a dark emerald-green dial with a gadroon pattern and three subdials for the date, month and weekday at nine, 12 and three o’clock, along with the moonphase indication at six o’clock. True to Piaget tradition, the subdials incorporate several finishes, adding visual richness as the light plays across them, along with Super-Luminova® indexes. While retaining the gadroons that have been part of the Piaget Polo signature since 1979 on both the case, the aesthetic link between the new-gen Piaget Polo and its predecessors is reinforced by the reappearance of the gadroons on the bracelet.

Photo Credit: Piaget