Last November, in the misty Before Times, when people can still share the physical room with one another, a ballroom in a unique midtown hotel invited 110 pinnacle watch collectors from 13 nations for mixed drinks, lunch, and also, a “sexpile.”
Prior to your head filling with Bret Easton Ellis pictures of wealthy debauchery, know that the “sexpile” is made up not of human bodies yet of watches: thousands of countless bucks’ worth of classic Rolexes, loaded atop one another like mating crabs. In a space camouflaged as an Investor Convention, unusual Submariners, as well as Cosmographs, Day-Dates, and Milgausses, Oysters, as well as Daytonas, littered the tables, ostentatiously jeweled, underrated or as connoisseurs like them best, weathered, as well as faded to a “tropicalization” one-of-a-kind to every piece, a natural procedure which mentions traveling, extremes of temperature level, as well as unknown tales.
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This was America’s first Rolliefest, an $850-a-ticket, invitation-only event of several of the world’s most influential watch collectors, an event that outgrew a special online area of Rolex-worshippers. Among the pieces on show was a solid gold Daytona previously possessed by the Sultan of Oman, also, called the “Red Sultan,” and a 1958 Rolex GMT-Master Ref 6542 whose original radium lume still signed up an unsafe 99.9 microSieverts, yes, one Rolliefest attendee brought along a Geiger counter.
Also, the centerpiece was the “sexpile:” some of the world’s rarest, as well as most important watches scattered carelessly along with an 18ft table for Rolliefest guests to manage, take a look at, as well as wear. With an estimated $50m to $100m worth of timepieces in the room, this totals up to either an exceptional display of confidence in the code of the Rolex-lover or a nerve-shredding invitation for something to go missing out on. Maybe the armed guards on the door lent an air of confidence.