Why you should wear a white ceramic watch – and how to do so, not just in summer

The bold watches are challenging to work with and even seen as ‘offensive’ by some … so why do brands like Omega, Cartier and IWC Schaffhausen seem to love them? Chris Rovzar finds out
White ceramic is for the bold watch-lover

And yet, this year, IWC came out with both a Pilot’s Watch Chronograph and a Perpetual Calendar ProSet in its Le Petit Prince line, a continuing partnership between the Swiss watchmaker and the descendants of Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, author of the beloved The Little Prince books. Those watches always have dark blue dials, to evoke the night sky. The white ceramic, Brunner says, was a really good match with this tone.


It was made that way because the designers wanted the watch to glow in the dark – incredibly brightly, and for a long time. That meant mixing a high-potency Super-LumiNova powder into the ceramic powder when the watch was sintered, the process of fusing together powders into a solid through high heat. “You cannot blend Super-LumiNova in a dark colour like black ceramics, for example, it would just absorb too much light,” Brunner says. This meld of ceramic and luminescent material gave the watch its name, Ceralume.