Monochrome Watches
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The Baltic Prismic Stone Enters the Permanent Collection with New Patterns

A new series of stone dial Prismic cocktail watches with upgraded movements and four distinctive moods.

calendarCreated with Sketch. | ic_dehaze_black_24pxCreated with Sketch. By Denis Peshkov | ic_query_builder_black_24pxCreated with Sketch. 2 min read |

Since 2017, the French watch brand Baltic has built its reputation on compact, retro-inspired designs with sharp detailing and accessible pricing. The Prismic collection, launched in 2024, marked a step up in refinement: a 1960s “cocktail watch” take with a complex steel-and-titanium case, crisp Dauphine hands and a slim hand-wound Swiss calibre. Later that year, the first Prismic Stone Dials arrived as limited “showroom editions” for Paris, London and New York, each with a coloured natural stone dial.

With its first standalone boutique now open, Baltic brings the stone concept into the core range. The new Prismic Stone series joins the permanent collection, featuring four dials in Pietersite, Pink Albite, Bloodstone, and Dumortierite. Each is cut from a thousand-year-old natural stone, so no two watches will look exactly alike.

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The design of the Prismic remains unchanged. The 36mm case blends cocktail watch proportions with a modern construction: bezel, lugs and caseback in 316L stainless steel, mounted on a grain-finished Grade 5 titanium mid-case. Lug-to-lug is 44mm, and the thickness is 9.2mm, including the double-domed sapphire (7.4mm without), so it stays slim on the wrist while retaining plenty of visual presence. The stepped bezel combines a polished upper ring with a circular-brushed lower section; lugs are polished on top and horizontally brushed on the sides. Water-resistance is 30m.

The dial is pared back to let the stones do the talking. Pietersite, Pink Albite, Bloodstone and Dumortierite each bring their own patterning and depth, from swirling chatoyance to dense speckling. Applied, polished hour markers and brushed Dauphine hands with polished chamfers keep the display sharp but restrained. A snailed small seconds is positioned at 6 o’clock, with a matching Dauphine hand. There is no date to interrupt the surface.

For this series, Baltic upgrades the movement to the La Joux-Perret D100, a hand-wound calibre offering a 50-hour power reserve and offered as an alternative to the ETA Peseux 7001. It is visible through the sapphire caseback, with contemporary decoration on the bridges and barrel. The low 2.5mm movement height is what allows the Prismic to remain Baltic’s thinnest watch to date.

The Prismic Stone is delivered either on a slim Italian calf leather strap or on Baltic’s brushed braided mesh bracelet. The mesh follows the curvature of the case and wrist, uses a sliding clasp for easy adjustment, and both options feature quick-release spring bars.

The Baltic Prismic Stone series is now part of the permanent collection, with a public launch scheduled for 2 December 2025 (Paris time) and deliveries from 3 December 2025. Prices range from EUR 1,300 to EUR 1,510, depending on the stone/strap combination (excl. taxes). For more details, please visit baltic-watches.com.

https://monochrome-watches.com/2025-baltic-prismic-stone-dials-permanent-collection-bloodstone-dumortierite-pietersite-pink-albite-accessible-dress-watch-price-introducing/

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