Zenith Keyhole

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REF A6621
Automatic-winding
36 MM
– Show less
SKU AS09449
Article Number 40991869
ref A6621
case size 36 MM
movement Automatic-winding
approximate age 1960s
dial color Silver
material Stainless Steel
style Avant-Garde
category Vintage
bracelet Metal
lug width 18 MM
Includes Tropical-style, stainless steel cuff bracelet with unsigned hook and lock clasp.
overall condition Great condition overall. Case and bracelet show light wear throughout. Dial is excellent showing light and even patina. Hands show faint signs of oxidation.
REF A6621
Automatic-winding
36 MM
– Show less
SKU AS09449
Article Number 40991869
ref A6621
case size 36 MM
movement Automatic-winding
approximate age 1960s
dial color Silver
material Stainless Steel
style Avant-Garde
category Vintage
bracelet Metal
lug width 18 MM
Includes Tropical-style, stainless steel cuff bracelet with unsigned hook and lock clasp.
overall condition Great condition overall. Case and bracelet show light wear throughout. Dial is excellent showing light and even patina. Hands show faint signs of oxidation.

Why We Love it

It’s finally happening.

The watch community, and even mainstream pop culture, are waking up to more avant-garde, esoteric timepieces. Gone are the days where everyone is clamoring for a stainless steel sports watch. It’s the irregular case shapes, funky dial designs, and exotic materials that are starting to take up space in the fore-brain.

It’s pieces like the Cartier Crash, Audemars Piguet Ref 1216-5157, and even the Accutron ‘Floppy Football’ that seemingly have inspired successful contemporary releases in the Mirage from Berneron, A1 from Anoma, and the B/1 from Toledano & Chan.

The piece we have here, a Zenith Reference A6621, absolutely belongs in that conversation!

The Zenith A6621 was introduced in 1965 to celebrate the manufacture’s 100 year anniversary and ceased production in 1969. Housed in a peculiar, ‘UFO’ case, this piece featured a rather wide beveled bezel with an integrated date magnifier at 6 o’clock. The combination of these features resulted in a dial silhouette that resembles a keyhole, hence the nickname and its popularity amongst vintage watch enthusiasts.

This piece features a 36mm stainless steel case with an acrylic crystal, integrated signed crown, and straight lugs. The dial features a two-tone silver dial that has developed a warm shade of cream patina. Additionally, the dial features a ‘dot’ minute track, a matching ‘black line’ handset, Zenith’s ‘Guiding Star’ logo.

Outfitted on a funky, Tropical-style, stainless steel cuff bracelet with an unsigned hook and lock clasp, this piece features the manufacture’s self-winding Calibre 2542 movement.

Zenith didn’t just make iconic chronographs. They also produced heavily designed pieces with a certain level of charm and visual weight, such as this Zenith Keyhole!

Brand Story

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Georges Favre-Jacot began producing pocket watches in Le Locle at the age of twenty-two. By the turn of the 20th century, Favre-Jacot was producing marine chronometers and chronometer-grade movements, one of which won a chronometry competition in Neuchâtel in 1903. Under the name Zenith, formally established in 1911, Favre-Jacot expanded his production to include wristwatches.

Zenith's chronographs in particular gained a reputation for excellence. At first Zenith used Excelsior Park and Valjoux movements, sharing them with Universal Genève and Movado (with which Zenith would merge for a time in 1969). By the 1960s Zenith acquired ébauche manufacturer Martel and began using their movements exclusively, leading to lauded calibers such as the 146HP and 146DP, which launched in 1969.

1969 was a banner year for horology, as it saw the launch of the first automatic chronograph movement. This was a race between a team consisting of Hamilton, Heuer, Buren, Dubois-Depraz, and Breitling; Seiko; and Zenith. Zenith used the Caliber 146 as a basis for the caliber which the brand would dub "El Primero" — "the first." Of the consortium’s Caliber 11, Seiko’s reference 6139, and the El Primero, only the latter feature a “high-beat” movement for increased accuracy.

Zenith ceased using manually-wound movements in their chronographs after the introduction of the El Primero — however, then the Quartz Crisis of the 1970s hit, and the company was sold. Employees were ordered to destroy or otherwise liquidate their mechanical watchmaking tooling, but incredibly, one daring engineer, Charles Vermot, decided to hide machinery behind a false wall that he built himself in the attic of the company’s manufacture in Le Locle. He told no one about what he was doing — not even his family.

Then, in the 1980s after the company had changed hands once again, he led modern Zenith management to this secret cache of horological wonders, in which the El Primero tooling was hidden. Ebel placed the first modern order for El Primero movements in 1984, but it was Rolex, who ordered thousands of calibers to power their new automatic Daytonas, that saved the firm. Today, the El Primero powers numerous vintage-inspired chronographs as well as the new Chronomaster Sport, a watch aimed as a competitor at — with much irony — the Daytona.

A:S Guarantee

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Our Pledge

Analog:Shift stands behind the authenticity of our products in perpetuity.

Condition

Since our pieces are vintage or pre-owned, please expect wear & patina from usage and age. Please read each item description and examine all product images.

Warranty

We back each Analog:Shift vintage timepiece with a one-year mechanical warranty from the date of purchase.

International Buyers

Please contact us prior to purchase for additional details on shipping and payment options.

Shipping & Returns

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All of our watches include complementary insured shipping within the 50 states.

Most of our products are on hand and will ship directly from our headquarters in New York City. In some cases, watches will be shipped directly from one of our authorized partners.

We generally ship our products via FedEx, fully insured, within 5 business days of purchase. An adult signature is required for receipt of all packages for insurance purposes. Expedited shipping is available at an additional cost. We are also happy to hand deliver your purchase in Manhattan or you may pick it up at our showroom.

Returns must be sent overnight or by priority international delivery, fully insured and paid for by the customer. A restocking fee may apply. Watches must be returned in the same condition as initially shipped.

We welcome international buyers, please contact us prior to purchase for additional details on shipping and payment options.

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Zenith Keyhole

Zenith Keyhole

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Zenith Keyhole