TAG Heuer Carrera: The Race Never Stops
£60.20£76.00 (-21%)
Nicholas Biebuyck’s TAG Heuer Carrera is a luxurious, elegant ode to the legendary men and women’s watches.
Developed 60 years ago from the eponymous race that bequeathed its speed, drive, and virality, the TAG Heuer Carrera is a legendary and iconic timepiece that remains synonymous with competition, modernity, and luxury today.
TAG Heuer Carrera unfolds decade-by-decade to tell the watch’s extraordinary saga within this luxurious and elegant, yet authoritative, package. The book features a special binding and uses several inserts distributed throughout that reveal the iconic Carrera Collection DNA. Fans and collectors of the iconic watches will find more than 600 major references of Carrera watches from 1963 through to 2023, offering a complete view of the collection.
Includes Full-Color Illustrations
Developed 60 years ago from the eponymous race that bequeathed its speed, drive, and virality, the TAG Heuer Carrera is a legendary and iconic timepiece that remains synonymous with competition, modernity, and luxury today.
TAG Heuer Carrera unfolds decade-by-decade to tell the watch’s extraordinary saga within this luxurious and elegant, yet authoritative, package. The book features a special binding and uses several inserts distributed throughout that reveal the iconic Carrera Collection DNA. Fans and collectors of the iconic watches will find more than 600 major references of Carrera watches from 1963 through to 2023, offering a complete view of the collection.
Includes Full-Color Illustrations
Read more
Additional information
Publisher | La Martinière/Abrams (9 Nov. 2023) |
---|---|
Language | English |
Hardcover | 348 pages |
ISBN-10 | 1419770306 |
ISBN-13 | 978-1419770302 |
Dimensions | 26.16 x 3.68 x 32.26 cm |
by Jason Pace
Excellent seller, very pleased! Got what I needed.
by P. Hadley
TAG should concentrate on selling watches and not getting into publishing from the look of this book! Not a helpful tool for collectors but maybe for people who just like books for the sake of books on a shelf. Far too many generic images and too many mistakes and incorrectly labelled references. Disappointing