Wine Time wall clock by Arti e Mestieri in powder coated metal and German clock mechanism
Arti e Mestieri
Small Nude Clock of Arti e Mestieri laser cut made in Italy
Small Nude Clock of Arti e Mestieri laser-cut and powder-finished with internal German mechanism and available in the following finishes:
black
White
hazelnut
Dimensions in cm: diam. 59
Data sheet
One of the most beautiful moments in a person's life is when he signs the contract for a house, for an environment that finally, after many sacrifices, can truly define "his". A house is a real estate that you never lose, it is yours forever, and as such it must be guarded, loved and pampered from top to bottom, choosing (obviously within everyone's possibilities) the right solution that especially meets the style you love. Moreover. Then when the house begins to take shape and room after room almost nothing is missing, the only thing missing to give an extra touch of class is to make sure that everything fits together and that looking around you can say "yes, it's home. my!". And what is missing to better mark the rhythm of a new routine, to mark day after day every event, success, victory, conquest or steps taken alone or together with the person you love, to move forward in time, day after day, hour after Now? Well, the answer lies in these words, which one after the other mark the passing of time, which is never lost, but always savored. A watch is what it takes! A beautiful, large, essential but eccentric watch, retro yet design, which crushes the eyeglass to vintage without ever moving away from the contemporary. Arti e Mestieri realizes this Nudo series to strip the object of any fantasy, tinsel, squiggle, extravagant shape and color, to leave room for minimalism par excellence, for a union of lines and points that, like a morse code, only communicates time. that flows, and consequently, in a newly born home, the life to live fully with the people you love most in the world. Find your best watch and get yourself a nice gift. Calypso was the goddess who, in the fifth book of Homer's Odyssey, welcomed Ulysses keeping him "hidden" in this lost paradise for seven years. The meaning of his name is in fact contained within the Homeric story: Calypso derives from the verb “to hide”; out of love, he kept Ulysses on the island against his will, until his final abandonment due to the father of the gods, Zeus. Hermes, the messenger charged with warning the enamored goddess, communicates the ominous divine decision, destroying the love of the Goddess for her beloved prisoner and love Odysseus.
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