Key Highlights
- The Czapek Promenade Goutte de Rosée is limited to 25 pieces in an 18K yellow gold 38mm case, available from 26 May 2026 through authorised retailers and czapek.com.
- Its green Grand Feu flinqué enamel dial — produced by Donzé Cadrans — required evaluating ten enamel formulations and carries a rejection rate approaching 50 percent; roughly 60 blanks were needed to deliver 25 finished dials.
- Up to five hours of skilled labour per dial, across approximately eight kiln firings and forty minutes of hand-polishing, account for each piece’s singular character.
- The in-house Calibre SXH5.1 provides a 60-hour power reserve via a recycled 950 platinum micro-rotor, visible through a sapphire caseback.

A Dial Built from the Ground Up
Silver, Steel and the First Strike
The Goutte de Rosée’s dial does not begin with enamel. A 925 sterling silver base plate receives the signature ripple pattern first — pressed using a stamping die machined to carry the full three-dimensional wave motif designed by Czapek’s team. Every strike transfers the pattern’s complete topography into the metal, establishing the relief that will later shape how colour reads under light.
From that embossed silver base, artisans at Donzé Cadrans — whose Fondation Haute Horlogerie-recognised craft places them among the sector’s most exacting enamel ateliers — apply approximately five successive layers of translucent green Grand Feu enamel by hand, firing the dial after each application. The differential in enamel thickness is the engine of the illusion: up to 0.5mm in the deepest recesses, under 0.2mm at the crests. Those 0.3mm shift the perceived colour and depth as light strikes from different angles, producing the appearance of moving water across a flat surface.
The Particular Difficulty of Green on Silver
Green enamel interacts unpredictably with silver, creating adhesion failures and surface blemishes that blue does not. Donzé Cadrans evaluated approximately ten formulations before finding one with both the correct visual character and chemical stability. Only four craftspeople at the atelier apply enamel to these dials — artisans who had already logged years on Grand Feu white dials and standard transparent enamels before this technique.

After the eight kiln passages are complete, approximately forty minutes of hand-polishing bring the dial to its final smooth, taut finish. The cumulative investment reaches up to five hours of skilled labour per dial. For a conventional Grand Feu enamel dial, industry rejection rates run between 25 and 30 percent; here, they approach 50 percent — the varying enamel thickness creates differential stress that can crack the plate when the outer diameter is cut and the centre hole drilled. To guarantee 25 saleable pieces, Donzé Cadrans began with around 60 blanks. No two of the resulting dials are identical: a tolerance of ±0.05mm around the 0.90mm target thickness is enough to produce perceptible differences in saturation and relief legibility across the edition.
Movement and Architecture
Calibre SXH5.1 Through the Caseback
The automatic Calibre SXH5.1 is visible through the sapphire caseback. Its micro-rotor, turned in recycled 950 platinum, leaves seven skeletonised bridges exposed — each drawing formal lineage from François Czapek’s 19th-century pocket watches. Power reserve stands at 60 hours; frequency at 4 Hz (28,800 vph). A stop-seconds function allows precise time-setting.

Case and Dial Proportions
The 38mm case in 18K 2N yellow gold adds material warmth that the original stainless steel Goutte d’Eau deliberately withheld. The small seconds subdial at 4:30 — the optical epicentre of the ripple pattern on the predecessor — is retained here, anchoring the composition and reinforcing the visual continuity of the Promenade collection’s design language.
Edition Context and Availability
Twenty-Five Pieces, Each Singular
The Promenade collection functions, in Czapek’s own framing, as the Maison’s canvas for creative expression. Where the Goutte d’Eau explored optical illusion through blue on steel, the Goutte de Rosée turns the same formal logic toward nature — morning dew, green growth, the transience of early light. The case material shift to yellow gold is not incidental; it positions this edition as the more precious, warmer iteration within the same conceptual lineage, informed by discussions that have extended since the Goutte d’Eau’s presentation at Watches and Wonders.

Orders open on 26 May 2026 through Czapek authorised retailers worldwide, the Geneva flagship, and czapek.com. Deliveries are expected to begin in June 2026. At 25 pieces — itself a function of the dial’s production constraints rather than an arbitrary commercial decision — the edition is among the most tightly contained releases in the Promenade line.


Stay ahead of the latest releases. Subscribe to our newsletter for editor-curated coverage of luxury timepieces across the GCC.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many pieces of the Czapek Promenade Goutte de Rosée are produced?
The Promenade Goutte de Rosée is a limited edition of 25 pieces. To deliver these 25 finished dials, Donzé Cadrans began with a production run of approximately 60 blanks, due to a rejection rate approaching 50 percent.
What movement powers the Czapek Promenade Goutte de Rosée?
The watch is powered by the in-house automatic Calibre SXH5.1, featuring a micro-rotor in recycled 950 platinum, seven skeletonised bridges, a 60-hour power reserve, and a frequency of 4 Hz (28,800 vph) with a stop-seconds function.
Where can the Czapek Promenade Goutte de Rosée be purchased?
The Promenade Goutte de Rosée is available to order exclusively through Czapek authorised retailers worldwide, Czapek's flagship store in Geneva, and on czapek.com from May 26th 2026, with deliveries expected to begin in June 2026.
What makes each Czapek Goutte de Rosée dial unique?
No two dials are identical. The target enamel thickness of 0.90mm carries a tolerance of ±0.05mm, meaning dials at the upper limit present a denser, more saturated green, while those at the lower limit allow the wave relief to read more vividly. Natural variation in hand-application further distinguishes each piece.
Who produced the enamel dials for the Czapek Promenade Goutte de Rosée?
The Grand Feu flinqué enamel dials were produced in close collaboration with Donzé Cadrans, one of the watch industry's most accomplished enamel dial-making ateliers. Only four craftspeople at Donzé Cadrans apply enamel to these dials, each with years of experience on Grand Feu techniques.


