

The Le Régulateur Louis Erard x Worn & Wound is a reminder that mechanical watchmaking can still feel genuinely experimental. Created in collaboration with Worn & Wound, Louis Erard reimagines its signature regulator layout as a layered, almost architectural study in texture, color, and motion.


The regulator format—separating hours, minutes, and seconds—provides the perfect canvas. Here, it’s executed across three distinct dial planes. A near-white base supports skeletonized hour and seconds discs that appear to float as they rotate. Above that, a fluted light-blue minute ring adds rhythm without visual noise. The topmost layer, finished in deep-lacquered cobalt, anchors the composition with crisp white numerals and indices, delivering instant legibility and bold contrast.

At the center, Louis Erard’s polished “fir tree” minute hand acts as a sculptural focal point. As the skeletonized discs turn beneath it, time becomes kinetic—less about static reading and more about visual engagement.
The 39mm polished steel case, with its bowl-shaped midsection and straight lugs, strikes a balance between elegance and presence. A pebbled taupe leather strap keeps things refined while complementing the dial’s blue tonal range. Inside, the Swiss-made Sellita SW266-1 automatic movement delivers 28,800 bph performance, hacking, hand-winding, and a custom Louis Erard rotor.
Limited to just 99 pieces and priced at $4,990, this collaboration transforms timekeeping into a quietly radical design statement.
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