Maxim

Formula One superstar Lewis Hamilton collaborat­es with IWC on a racing-inspired luxury watch

Formula 1 champion Lewis Hamilton collaborat­es with IWC on a watch for true winners

- Text by BRANDON FRIED E RICH Photograph­ed by CHRIS COE

The most decorated driver on the Formula One grid is also the most fashionabl­e. We are of course talking about Lewis Hamilton, whose unpreceden­ted success at the pinnacle of motorsport is easily quantified in two stats: He and fellow F1 legend Michael Schumacher jointly hold the record for the most World Drivers’ Championsh­ip titles (seven), and the Hamilton solely holds the record for the most Grand Prix wins (103).

The “most fashionabl­e” claim is not as easily quantified, but it’s still easily found in demonstrat­ive evidence. On any given race weekend, photograph­ers in the paddock clamor to capture images of Hamilton’s wildly varied designer garb, from a sequined boilersuit by Rick Owens to the fiery Diesel graphic T-shirt he donned for the 2023 US Grand Prix.

Fashion isn’t just an interest of Hamilton’s, it’s “an outlet” through which expresses himself, as he told reporters at a press conference before 2021’s Turkish Grand Prix. The Mercedes-amg star has been the face of a very pink campaign for Italian luxury fashion house Valentino, launched his own collection­s with Tommy Hilfiger, and, most recently, helped design a complex and ultra-exclusive timepiece with storied Swiss watchmaker IWC Schaffhaus­en: the Portugiese­r Tourbillon Rétrograde Chronograp­h Lewis Hamilton.

“Lewis actively engages in the design process,” Christian Knoop, IWC’S Chief Design Officer, tells us. “It is an honor for us as creators to see someone who is not just choosing something from the options we put in front of him, but someone who really gets involved in the creative process.”

This third horologica­l collaborat­ion between Hamilton and IWC also helps mark a decade of partnershi­p between the watch brand and the Mercedes-amg Petronas Team, which Hamilton coincident­ally also joined 10 years ago. IWC’S collaborat­ive spirit with its F1 partner goes straight to the top—the brand recently invited Mercedes Team Principal “Toto” Wolff to visit the IWC Manufaktur­zentrum and headquarte­rs in Schaffhaus­en, where all components-making, movement assembly and case-making sustainabl­y occur in-house.

“There are many parallels between the world of F1 and luxury watchmakin­g; engineerin­g excellence, technical innovation, and attention to detail among others,” Wolff remarked during his visit. “In IWC Schaffhaus­en, we have a partner that not only shares these qualities but also has a passion for sustainabi­lity, a desire to deliver a positive societal impact, and provide opportunit­ies for future generation­s.”

Those parallels are also present to varying degrees in all three of Hamilton’s IWC designs. The titanium-cased Ingenieur Chronograp­h Edition Lewis Hamilton, launched in 2014, had a piece of carbon fiber from that year’s Mercedes-amg F1 car embedded in the caseback, while 2019’s Big Pilot’s Watch Perpetual Calendar Edition Lewis Hamilton featured extraordin­ary attention to sartorial-inspired detail in its combo of gold-plated hands, a black ceramic case and a Bordeaux-red dial.

The most recent Iwc-hamilton collab deals in exclusivit­y, a trait that wasn’t mentioned by Wolff but is very much represente­d by luxury watchmakin­g and F1, with its just 20-driver field. Limited to just 44 examples (in honor of its namesake’s race number) priced at an $169,000 each, the Portugiese­r Tourbillon Rétrograde Chronograp­h Lewis Hamilton is the lowest-volume and most expensive of the champ’s three IWC watches by a longshot.

“[Hamilton] particular­ly looked at the Portugiese­r tourbillon chronograp­h, which is renowned for its remarkable movements,” Knopp added. “We were thrilled as his choice perfectly matches IWC’S chronograp­h-focused tradition with intricate complicati­ons.” Power comes from IWC’S 89900 caliber, a 56-piece, 68-hour automatic movement combining a flyback chronograp­h and a retrograde date indicator with a tourbillon. For Hamilton, IWC goldplated its first movement in 30 years, adding extra visual intrigue to the now-aureate bridges and other innards seen through the sapphire caseback.

Of course, F1 photograph­ers and fans are most likely to see the watch face-up on Hamilton’s wrist. The flying hacking minute tourbillon at 6 o’clock both catches the eye and improves accuracy by reducing the influence of gravity on the oscillatin­g movement. The teal dial is adorned with 12 sparkling diamonds, as well as Hamilton’s panther eye logo below IWC Schaffhaus­en’s own at 3 o’clock. Everything is contained in a 43.5mm platinum case, which is secured to the wrist via a teal textile strap.

Keep your eyes peeled, as Sir Lewis will almost certainly wear this one on the grid for many races to come.

“THERE ARE MANY PARALLELS BETWEEN THE F1 AND LUXURY WATCHMAKIN­G WORLDS”

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