Lange is the most underrated finisher in haute horlogerie, and the independent worship crowd doesn’t want to hear it
I’ve been going deep on finishing lately, handled a lot of pieces under loupe, spent time with references from Petermann, Sylvian, Akrivia, Romain Gauthier, Laurent Ferrier, De Bethune, FP Journe, and Lange across the board. And I keep coming back to the same uncomfortable conclusion that the finishing discourse refuses to say out loud.
Most celebrated independents are finishing simple watches.
The C by Romain Gauthier is a time-only, manually wound sports watch with 50m water resistance and you can’t even jump in a pool with it! The Chronomètre Contemporain is three hands. Beautiful finishing on all of them? Absolutely. But you’re working on an open canvas with room to breathe, fewer parts, less interference, more space for the decorator. When your movement has 12 components on a bridge, making each one perfect is a different task than when you have 40.
Now look at what Lange is finishing. The Zeitwerk’s jumping numerals mechanism with its constant-force remontoire with micro bevelled teeth! The Datograph’s column wheel, horizontal clutch, flyback mechanism, and full time train, all finished to the same Glashütte standard simultaneously.
The Pour le Mérite’s 636 part chain-driven fusée tourbillon, where individual chain links are individually bevelled for a total of 987 total movement parts. The double assembly process, where a fully working movement is completely disassembled purely to re-decorate before final assembly, applied not to a three-hander but to some of the most mechanically complex movements in production.
Finishing a complicated movement to the same standard as a simple one is objectively harder. More parts. More interference. More surfaces in awkward positions. The independent worship crowd has romanticised the lone artisan so thoroughly that they’ve stopped doing the actual comparison.
Under the loupe, Lange matches or surpasses across the board. At complexity that most celebrated independents have never attempted.
The one area I’ll genuinely separate out is Laurent Ferrier, and for a different reason than most people cite.
LF is the only maker I’ve encountered where the finishing philosophy extends uniformly across the entire object. Movement, yes. But also case, box, bracelet, strap, lug-to-case transition, titanium treatment. Their titanium feels hand-considered in a way that makes a lot of other pieces at similar price points feel like a different category of object entirely. LF treats titanium like it deserves the same reverence as platinum, and the result is a watch you genuinely want to keep touching, which almost no other piece at any price achieves.
The narrative around independents is compelling and I’m not dismissing the craft. Rounded anglage from Gauthier is genuinely rare. Rexhepi’s internal angles are as good as anyone alive. Dufour set the template for a generation. But the conversation keeps happening as if complexity doesn’t exist as a variable. It does, and when you factor it in, Lange looks very different.
Curious if anyone who has spent serious time under loupe with Lange complications actually disagrees with this. Not the narrative, the actual finishing under magnification.