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Lunch time

A trip to restaurant Oxté in Paris with the founders of the watch marque

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A bite in Paris with Bruno Belamich and Carlos Rosillo of Bell & Ross

Bruno Belamich and Carlos Rosillo met when they were 14 years old and ‘have been together ever since’. Before setting up watch house Bell & Ross (a riff on the first three letters of each surname) in Paris, they were, effectivel­y, family. ‘When Bruno’s family left their Burgundy home to come to Paris, he didn’t love it,’ says Rosillo. ‘We met at school and I was introduced to Bruno’s family. They were very welcoming. His grandmothe­r even made bread for us.’

As teenagers, Belamich and Rosillo shared a passion for technology and watches, which led Belamich to a design position with German watch brand Sinn. Rosillo, meanwhile, studied finance. In 1992, they joined forces to realise their vision for a design-driven brand, creating functional watches for profession­als, and started dragging prototypes to watch fairs.

A few years later, Chanel chairman Alain Wertheimer offered them investment, and remains a shareholde­r.

We talk over lunch at their favourite restaurant, Oxté, in Paris’ 17th arrondisse­ment. As soon as we are seated, Mexican owner and chef, Michelin-starred Enrique Casarrubia­s, steps out of his visibly busy kitchen, presided over by a Bell & Ross wall clock, to greet us, adding to the bonhomie. ‘We are always at home in a family environmen­t,’ says Rosillo.

Between courses, we speak about their likes and loves: cigars, their wives and children, Velázquez, yoga, tai chi, 1970s Japanese watch design and their last big release, the ‘BR 05’ watch line. A mash-up of key Bell & Ross designs, and a more commercial offering than the defining slim, square-dial cockpit instrument­s for the wrist that made the Bell & Ross name, the steel ‘BR 05’ is a handsome, everyday timepiece that has been enthusiast­ically received across the globe.

Occasional turbulence is, of course, a factor in any relationsh­ip, but the pair are in it for the long haul. ‘It’s easier to manage a business when there are two of you – it gives you balance, a better perspectiv­e. It’s about trust,’ says Belamich. ‘We have common values and life philosophi­es,’ concurs Rosillo. *

 ?? Photograph­y: Marvin Leuvrey Writer: Caragh Mckay ?? Bruno Belamich, wearing the new ‘BR 05’ blue dial on a rubber strap, and Carlos Rosillo, wearing the new ‘BR 05’ black dial, steel bracelet version, photograph­ed at their Paris office in a 19th-century townhouse in the 16th arrondisse­ment
Photograph­y: Marvin Leuvrey Writer: Caragh Mckay Bruno Belamich, wearing the new ‘BR 05’ blue dial on a rubber strap, and Carlos Rosillo, wearing the new ‘BR 05’ black dial, steel bracelet version, photograph­ed at their Paris office in a 19th-century townhouse in the 16th arrondisse­ment

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