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How Horoloupe’s Austen Chu went from Instagram influencer to launching retail platform WristCheck and collaborating with Audemars Piguet on a China limited edition timepiece

Watch influencer Austen Chu, founder of Instagram account Horoloupe, at AP House, Central, Hong Kong. Photo: Nora Tam
Watch influencer Austen Chu, founder of Instagram account Horoloupe, at AP House, Central, Hong Kong. Photo: Nora Tam
XXIV 2020

With Chu’s resale site set to launch, he recalls how his Horoloupe Instagram page won him attention and picks his watches of the moment including an arty collaboration between MB&F and H. Moser

Watch influencer Austen Chu, founder of Instagram account Horoloupe, has quickly risen to become an important voice in the world of watch collecting. The 24-year-old boasts 119,000 followers, and a quick scroll through his Insta page makes you feel like a child in a sweet shop: you are met with image after image of wrist shots showing limited editions and hard-to-find timepieces.

Austen Chu runs popular watch Instagram account Horoloupe. Photo: Nora Tam
Austen Chu runs popular watch Instagram account Horoloupe. Photo: Nora Tam

But not many know that Chu launched Horoloupe when he was 17 – “out of desperation and loneliness”, in his own words. “Watch collecting is an extremely knowledge-dense hobby, and for young collectors, it’s also an extremely lonely hobby … I wanted to feel a sense of belonging in the watch community, but most of the big watch accounts at the time ignored me when I reached out to them on Instagram with my personal, non-watch account,” he explains.

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Chu made the decision to stay anonymous during the first two years of running Horoloupe. It was a long time to stay silent, especially when you’re really passionate about something. But, in the process of collecting watches, Chu has learned the value of patience.

“I strongly believe that the word ‘patience’ is inherently bound to the phenomenon of watch collecting, especially for brands that still put emphasis on hand finishing and incorporating the human element into watchmaking,” he says. “Wait-lists aside, waiting months and months, sometimes a year or more, is commonplace in watch collecting.”

Once Horoloupe picked up steam, it caught the eye of some of the most important players in the watch industry, including Audemars Piguet’s Francois-Henry Bennahmias, which led to a collaboration that resulted in the launch of Chu’s own limited run of the Royal Oak watch.

Fast forward to today and Chu is taking his hobby to the next level with a business that opens doors for watch aficionados: he is set to launch retail platform WristCheck, which is dedicated to pre-owned watches.

“I’ve been working on this project all year and it’s finally launching in December,” he says.