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Kurono Tokyo Launches the 2026 Special Projects 37mm Inseki with Meteorite Dial

Grey meteorite and white lacquer for Kurono's latest member of the special projects collection.

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Kurono Tokyo, the accessible brand of independent watchmaker Hajime Asaoka, had quite a run last year, with a lot of impressive new models, most dedicated to celebrating its founder’s 60th anniversary. This includes the handsome Grand Jubilee Calendar Salmon, the Ice Blue 2025 Jubilee Sensu EOL, or the 34mm Star Dial watches. Starting 2026 with confidence, the young independent brand releases a new member of the “special projects” collection. Equipped with an appealing grey Muonionalusta meteorite dial, the 2026 Special Projects 37mm Inseki is yet another demonstration of Asaoka’s sense of style. 

With the “special projects” collection, Hajime Asaoka aims to bring more personal designs in limited runs. Watches that don’t fall into the classic collection, with a more expressive style, and/or less conventional techniques for the dial. The latest member of this collection marks the first time the Japanese brand has relied on an exotic material: meteorite. “I felt that the contrast between meteorite’s rugged texture and our soft, gentle case design would be fascinating. But there were challenges in bringing the idea to life. One of the defining features of Kurono Tokyo is its domed dial, and I wanted to preserve that even when working with meteorite. Shaping meteorite itself into a domed form is extremely difficult, so I explored a bull’s eye design instead, giving (…) the surrounding area a gentle curve towards the outer edge,” explains Hajime Asaoka.

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Kurono’s first watch of 2026 is built around a familiar case design, measuring a compact 37mm in diameter and 11.5mm in thickness – mostly due to the tall box-shaped crystal on top, as the case itself is only 7mm high. The case is made of steel and fully polished, with a rather limited water-resistance of 30m. As with many recent models by the brand, the crown is adorned with a black cabochon.

Inside the case, as always with Kurono, is a Miyota-sourced movement, owned by the Citizen Group. Here, we have the Japan-made calibre 90S5, a no-date automatic movement running at 4Hz and storing about 40h of power reserve. Not fancy but effective and reliable.

The novelty of the Kurono Special Projects 37mm Inseki is the dial. Here, the patterned centre is complemented by a white lacquered ring featuring Hajime’s personally designed Calligra typeface (an evolution of the Breguet numerals), painted in high relief, with a monochromatic look finished with hand-bent, high-polished steel hands. For the centre, Asaoka has chosen slices of the Muonionalusta meteorite, an iron-nickel meteorite, and one of the oldest known meteorites found on Earth. To give texture and consistency over the production run, Asaoka personally inspected every single dial. Only those with strong, well-defined Widmanstätten patterns were selected for final assembly. As a mark of this personal selection, each watch bears Hajime’s own seal on the dial.

Worn on a black calf leather strap (20mm lug width) and secured by a polished pin buckle, the 2026 Kurono Special Projects 37mm Inseki with Meteorite dial will be a limited production release and will not be repeated (no mention of the number of pieces produced). It will be available online at kuronotokyo.com from Thursday, 15 January 2026 at 11:00 PM JST (or 2:00 PM GMT). It will be strictly limited to one purchase per customer. Deliveries are expected from the end of February 2026, and the watch is priced at USD 1,850 (excluding taxes and a 15% tariff for US exports).

https://monochrome-watches.com/kurono-tokyo-2026-special-projects-37mm-inseki-meteorite-dial-price-introducing/

5 responses

  1. Expert, what is the point? Oris, IWC, and TAG Heuer use Sellita, which are basically ETA clones that go well over $2k. At least Citizen-Miyota are using movements that are somewhat original.

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  2. Expert, youre paying for the uniqueness, the dial, the craftsmanship. The movement is a workhorse that’ll last, nothing fancy.

    2
  3. Para ser e la serie premium seria 9, tiene la misma exactituc que el 9015, lo venden 4 veces mas caro, que tengan suerte.

    2
  4. No matter how one may try to justify it, and no matter how right one may be about the uniqueness, the dial, etc., the watch is not worth the outrageous pricing that’s being offered. There are other unique watches with unique dials and craftsmanship, with a Miyota 9 series movement that are priced much more in reality. At this rate, a broken watch industry has little incentive to fix itself.

    2

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