Collection Find: Paul Maillardet Late 1950s Landeron 149 Chronograph
A New Addition to my Private Collection:
I added this Paul Maillardet to my collection because it manages to be a chronograph without looking busy. What grabs me every time is how clean and elegant the dial is: two balanced registers, nicely shaped applied numerals and markers, and just enough scale printing to remind you that it is a real instrument without turning it into clutter.
There is also a bit of historical charm in the name. Paul Maillardet & Fils was part of that French Jura watchmaking world centered around Morteau, with roots tied to the old Ultra name and mid-century production in the Franco-Swiss orbit. That makes this watch feel less like a generic private-label chrono and more like a nice example of the postwar French-market chronograph tradition.
The movement helps a lot too. The Landeron 149 is not one of the famous column-wheel glamour calibers, but it is historically interesting in its own right, and I especially like that it gives you the more intuitive chronograph control layout: top pusher starts and stops, bottom pusher resets. It feels familiar in use, and it reminds me that Landeron was actively refining chronograph ergonomics in this period rather than just cranking out cheap alternatives.
After service, regulation, a fresh crystal, and the case work, this one turned into exactly the sort of vintage chronograph I like to keep around: handsome, wearable, and mechanically interesting without being precious. It is not trying to be a celebrity watch. It is just a very attractive mid-century chronograph that gets the basics right.