Bg17 yazdı:tabiki mubala mevcut ama kaynak da veriyim. Vakti olann okusun. Ticari ortamda yazilabilecegi kadar net yaziyor.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jaeger-LeCoultre
BIr kismini asagiya paste ettim.
ozellikle bu linkte jaeger tarihcesiyle net bir bicimde anlatiyor. VC yi birak PP icin bile denebilir.
Bi de Vacheron tarafindan anlatim.
http://www.thehourlounge.com/en/vacheron-constantin-discussions/tick-talks-guide-spotting-vacheron-constantin-627508
Merger with Jaeger-LeCoultre and Beyond
Reduced in workforce and capital by the Great Depression, Vacheron & Constantin were unprepared for the flood of orders that followed a recovery in the world's economy. The solution turned out to be a merger with Manufacture Jaeger-LeCoultre in 1938 under the holding company, Société Anonyme de Produits Industriels et Commerciaux (SAPIC). The merger ended production of in-house movements which were henceforth primarily based on JLC ebauches. Another consequence was the end of their relationship with Paris jewelers Verger Frères. Charles Constantin, great grand-nephew of François Constantin, retired from the company in 1949, leaving his nephew Léon Constantin as the sole family representative. Léon remained on the board of the firm's charitable trust, the Jules Weiss Foundation, until 1995 and thus ended the Constantin lineage which, at 175 years, surpassed the Vacheron bloodline by some three generations.
By 1965, Managing Director Georges Ketterer had amassed almost 90% of the company shares and once again made Vacheron & Constantin an independent entity. Sadly, he passed away in 1969. His son, Jacques, took hold of the reins.
In 1968 the "et" of Vacheron et Constantin was dropped from the company's advertising and by 1970 it was removed from their registered trademark. This signaled a gradual process of excising the ampersand (&) from their watches. A clear separation from the past occurred in 1974 when the company officially changed its name to Vacheron Constantin S.A. During the transition, the Manufacture used up existing stocks of components and ephemera. Indeed, as late as 1977 VC catalogs featured timepieces with both names!
http://www.wthejournal.com/en/news/view/the-fantastic-story-of-jaeger-lecoultre
n 1903, Paris-based watchmaker to the French Navy, Edmond Jaeger, challenged Swiss manufacturers to develop and produce the ultra-thin movements that he had invented.[6]
Jacques-David LeCoultre, Antoine’s grandson who was responsible for production at LeCoultre & Cie., accepted the challenge, giving rise to a collection of ultra-thin pocket watches, including the thinnest in the world in 1907, equipped with the LeCoultre Calibre 145 [see section 1.4.4].[6] The same year, French jeweller Cartier, one of Jaeger’s clients, signed a contract with the Parisian watchmaker under which all Jaeger movements for a period of fifteen years would be exclusive to Cartier. The movements were produced by LeCoultre.[6] Edmond Jaeger also acquired the patent for the atmospherically driven clock Atmos from its inventor Jean-Léon Reutter and licensed it to LeCoultre from 1936 for France, and in 1937 for Switzerland.
The collaboration between Jaeger and LeCoultre led to the company being officially renamed Jaeger-LeCoultre in 1937. However, from 1932 to approximately 1985, due to the Smoot Hawley Tariff Act, watches were cased in locally produced cases in North America and sold under the name LeCoultre by the company Vacheron-LeCoultre, a subsidiary of Longines-Wittnauer, with slightly different case designs. After 1985, Jaeger-LeCoultre was adopted uniformly worldwide. According to factory records, the last movement to be used in an American LeCoultre watch was shipped out of Le Sentier in 1976.
Some collectors and misinformed dealers have made the erroneous claim that American LeCoultre is not associated with Jaeger-LeCoultre Switzerland. The confusion stems from the 1950s, when the North American distributor of LeCoultre watches was the Longines-Wittnauer Group, which was also responsible for the distribution of Vacheron Constantin timepieces. Collectors have confused this distribution channel with the manufacture of the watches. According to Jaeger-LeCoultre enthusiast Zaf Basha, the "Galaxy", an upmarket mysterious dial diamond watch, is a collaboration between Vacheron & Constantin and LeCoultre for the American market. It features “LeCoultre” on the front and “Vacheron & Constantin — LeCoultre” stamped on the case. The LeCoultre trademark expired in 1985 and was replaced by the Jaeger-LeCoultre trademark.[9]Tgm yazdı:Geçmişte ve günümüzde bütün mekanizmaları jeager tasarımı derken emin miyiz? Bir defa VC Jeager dan neredeyse bir asır daha yaşlı bir marka.. VC den bahsederken Cenevre saat endüstrisini yaratan ve isviçre saatçiliğinin temelini atan markaların önemlilerinin birisinden bahsediyoruz. Kaldı ki ne VC tarihinde ne de Jeager tarihinde bundan bahsediliyor..
sadece marka yönetiyor demek bu markaya açıkça haksızlık olurBg17 yazdı:Benim vacheron markasina karsi dusuncelerim zaten biliniyor. Ama onlardan bagimsiz, overseas modelini zorlama buluyorum, yani VC spor saat yapmasa daha iyi. Patrimony, Les historiques e falan laf etmiyorum.
Nedenide, big date ve tasarim, 60 yasinda porsche 911 almis gobekli adam imaji gibi.
Bi de markanin gecmiste ve gunumuzde butun makenizmalari jaeger tasarimi. Adamlar nerdeysr sadece marka yonetiyor.
Geçmişten günümüze ibaresi çok iddialıydı, ben buna şaşırdım veya itiraz ettim

Verdiğin linkleri ve paste i satır satır okudum abi. Geçmişten günümüze olmasa da, özellikle büyük resesyon sonrası JLC'den ciddi bir teknik destek aldığı ve 1938 sonrası üretilen birçok VC calibrenin JLC base olduğu açıkça yazıyor

