Audacity, science and memory… enshrined in every C&M space watch
A C&M space watch doesn't just evoke these exploits: it preserves their tangible memory. Watches incorporating a meteorite , a fragment of lunar regolith, Martian dust… each of our creations seals within its dial a stage of human adventure beyond Earth's borders.
With its official authorization from the American space agency, Col&McArthur joins the select group of watchmakers able to offer a NASA watch. This institutional seal of approval lends the commemorative space watch collections an authenticity and legitimacy that few timepieces can claim. More than a distinctive mark, it pays tribute to all those—engineers, scientists, and astronauts—who contributed to crossing the final frontier.

These timepieces embody the alliance between audacity, science, and memory. Through our Interstellar space watch collection, we humbly remind ourselves that exploration is not only about crossing boundaries, but above all about shared human destinies. Every discovery, past or future, finds its meaning in the mark it leaves on our lives.
Lunar 1969: the space watch of the "small step" that became universal
On July 20, 1969, astronaut Neil Armstrong, on behalf of the entire American space program, set foot on the Moon and uttered the famous words: " That's one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind ." This historic moment marked more than just a technological victory in the context of the Cold War. It offered the world a new perspective: the Earth, fragile and blue, seen from an alien surface.


The Lunar 1969 encapsulates this moment in an exceptional space watch . Its dial contains an authenticated fragment of lunar regolith, sealed under sapphire crystal and accompanied by a certificate of authenticity. The series is limited to 1,969 pieces, in homage to the year of the moon landing.
On the wrist, this space watch does more than simply tell the date. It becomes an intimate reminder that yesterday's impossible is today's legacy. It speaks to those who are already pushing their own boundaries: starting a business, achieving personal success, fulfilling a long-held dream. Every glance at the dial of thislunar watch becomes an invitation to " take the next step ," to transform audacity into reality.

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Lunar 1.622: the lunar space watch to lighten your gravity, aim higher
While the Lunar 1969 watch celebrates the achievement, the Lunar 1.622 embodies the philosophy that stems from it. Its name refers to the average lunar gravity: 1.622 m/s², six times lighter than that of Earth.
The Lunar 1.622 space watch doesn't rely on visual approximations: its dial faithfully reproduces the lunar surface in relief—craters, maria, and rugged features—a landscape captured exactly as it exists beneath a metal disc. At 3 o'clock, a hermetically sealed chamber contains authentic lunar dust, or, in an alternative model, the imprint of the first step on the Moon. The circle around the dial lists the Apollo missions: those that remained in orbit are listed in white, while those that successfully landed the lunar module are listed in gold.

The Lunar 1.622 is more than just a tribute to space: like rockets that only reach orbit by jettisoning their stages, this timepiece teaches us through the history it perpetuates that practical methods and intellectual agility are the prerequisites for any ascent. On the wrist, this space watch becomes an invitation to reach higher, further.
Dare to remove the superfluous, let each step towards the essential bring us closer to our true objectives.

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Red 3.721: Greatness Born of Perseverance
While the Moon was the first horizon crossed, Mars remains the next great mystery. No human has yet set foot there, but the Red Planet is already being explored by our mechanical emissaries: the rovers. Most recently, in 2025, the Perseverance mission revealed credible evidence of ancient biosignatures, suggesting that Mars could have harbored life in its distant past. Science, like our quest for progress, doesn't finish anything; it extends everything: each advance illuminates a new frontier that our insatiable curiosity immediately challenges.
The Red 3.721 space watch takes its name from Martian gravity (3.721 m/s²). A true witness to the ongoing conquest of Mars, it condenses its identity: a red ring oxidized like the dust on its surface, a dial as dark as its heavy sky, and under sapphire glass, an authenticated fragment of Martian dust, striking proof that the unattainable can nevertheless rest in the palm of your hand.

Our watch, featuring the image of the planet Mars, celebrates this spirit of patient and persistent research. Like the Perseverance rover, which has been traveling alone on Mars for years, the Red 3.721 reminds us that every major discovery takes time. It took this arduous, step-by-step progression to reveal the first elements of an answer to a question that has haunted humanity for so long: Did Mars ever harbor life?

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Wearing this premium space watch means accepting this necessary rhythm, remembering that greatness is born from measured steps, repeated, held to the end.
A personal space watch: between memory, horizon… and anchoring
Whether they recall a step already taken or a mystery still unfolding, Col&McArthur space watches share a common purpose: to link a real fragment of the cosmos to human history.
But hoping to reach the stars only makes sense if we keep our feet on the ground. The Resilience 2020 model, a watch of our planet Earth , reminds us that every exploration begins with a solid foundation. Its fragmented dial, then sublimated by the art of Kintsugi, testifies that our collective wounds—pandemics, crises, fractures—can become strengths, like the golden scars of a humanity rising again. Hoping to reach other worlds first requires preserving our own, honoring the roots that sustain us, and passing on all the richness we have experienced.

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Thus, Col&McArthur's space and Earth watches celebrate the audacity of exploration while also honoring the duty to preserve one's origins. For the true legacy we pass on is not merely a fragment of the sky, but the strength to unite memory, responsibility, and hope.