Quill & Pad
  • Home
  • Articles
  • About
  • Glossary
  • Contact
  • Click to open the search input field Click to open the search input field Search
  • Menu Menu
You are here: Home1 / Watch Brands & Horology2 / Tutima3 / The Tutima Hommage Minute Repeater Chimes ‘Happy To Be Home̵...

Two faces, Two dials, Two identities

High performance escapement with
“triple pare-chute” protection

Limited edition of 10 pieces

The Tutima Hommage Minute Repeater Chimes ‘Happy To Be Home’

by Elizabeth Doerr

You may already know Tutima as a brand that makes sporty, pilot-style watches. If you do, then you probably also know that these have quite a history. But what you may not know is that Tutima, which has been at home in the northern part of what was formerly West Germany since about 1951, has inextricable roots in Glashütte.

Let’s take a brief look at the important points in Tutima’s history before we head to the main event: the Hommage Minute Repeater, which is the first minute repeater to be fully conceived, designed, manufactured and produced on German soil.

Tutima’s roots extend back 87 years to 1927. This was a period in which Glashütte and its Präzisions-Uhrenfabrik GmbH, the predominant movement maker in terms of volume, were plagued with economic troubles.

Dr. Ernst Kurtz was hired to help alleviate the difficulties caused by the era’s economics and the flood of Swiss wristwatches dominating the German and European markets. A jurist originally from northern Germany’s harbor city Hamburg, in 1927 Kurtz created the Glashütte watch factories Urofa (Uhren-Rohwerke-Fabrik Glashütte AG) and Ufag (Uhrenfabrik Glashütte AG) from the bankrupt Präzisions-Uhrenfabrik.

Dr. Kurtz (center with eyeglasses) in Tutima's original Glashütte workshops

Dr. Kurtz (center with eyeglasses) in Tutima’s original Glashütte workshops

Kurtz focused on wristwatches instead of the pocket watches that Glashütte had predominately been manufacturing (the city was a little late to that game). The economic upswing of the 1930s helped the two factories establish themselves in an international market made ever more competitive by trendy Swiss wristwatches.

Urofa concentrated on manufacturing ébauches (blank movement kits). Ufag, on the other hand, produced finished watches. And its top-quality brand was called Tutima.

Tutima soon became famous for its pilot’s watches thanks to the fact that the government integrated the two factories into the armament industry at the end of 1938 – as it did with other German manufacturers including A. Lange & Söhne, Wempe in Hamburg, and Laco and Stowa (both in Pforzheim).

By 1940, Tutima was no longer manufacturing civilian wristwatches – an obligation that brought forth one of the most legendary pilot’s watches of all time: the Reich’s air force watch. As this isn’t our topic for today, we’ll come back to more details on this at a later date.

East meets west

On May 8, 1945, just scant hours before the official end of World War II, Glashütte was bombed one final time. Kurtz left for the western part of Germany just days before, seemly anticipating the socialist years in store for eastern Germany in addition to the final bombing.

As both Urofa and Ufag had been dismantled by the Russians, Kurtz had to start over. Around 1951, he finally settled near Bremen in northern Germany. In 1960 Dieter Delecate, a close confidant of Kurtz and the man in charge of Tutima’s distribution and sales, took over the company’s production as well.

Delecate reconfigured the company, now Tutima Uhren GmbH (a limited company). Though the 1960s and ’70s were not easy, he continually modified structural and model policies, all the while never forgetting the original enthusiasm that led him to acquire the factory in the first place.

Delecate saw to it that Tutima thrived well past the quartz crisis to become a driving force in Germany during the mechanical renaissance.

The new Tutima headquarters and factory in Glashütte

The new Tutima headquarters and factory in Glashütte

Tutima Hommage Minute Repeater

Tutima Hommage Minute Repeater

Return to Glashütte

May 12, 2011 was a banner day for Tutima: after an absence of 65 years, Tutima finally returned home to Glashütte.

You may ask why this took 22 years after the fall of the Berlin Wall. But if you know the Delecate family – Dieter runs the family-owned business together with his two oldest children, Jörg and Ute – you know that these northerners are quite conservative when it comes to strategy. A big decision like acquiring property and setting up a factory in Glashütte would not be completed overnight.

Delecate bought the property formerly housing the area’s railroad maintenance crew in 2005 and began renovations of the building, which were only completed in 2008.

Tutima is now a direct neighbor to Nomos, whose headquarters are in the former train station. The state-of-the-art factory is also only steps away from both Glashütte Original and A. Lange & Söhne.

A “kitty corner” of high-end German watchmaking, so to speak.

From 2008 through 2011, Tutima’s technicians and Rolf Lang – father of Marco Lang of Lang & Heyne – created a highly complicated, limited edition timepiece to honor the return to Glashütte: the Tutima Hommage is the very first minute repeater to come out of Glashütte that was fully conceived, designed and produced in the German Mecca for fine watchmaking.

Watchmakers at the new Tutima workshop in Glashütte

Watchmakers at the new Tutima workshop in Glashütte

A tribute to Glashütte

Glashütte had never produced a full minute repeater without Swiss help. Ferdinand Adolph Lange patented a simple quarter repeater in 1866, and in 1873 his son Richard began producing a version with an updated mechanical design utilizing a separate spring barrel and stabilized by a typical Glashütte three-quarter plate. A. Lange & Söhne made about 700 of these up to 1940 (most before 1914).

All other repeaters made in Glashütte were based on ébauches supplied by Audemars Piguet or LeCoultre, which the Le Sentier-based company made especially for Glashütte entrepreneurs (among them A. Lange & Söhne, Julius Assmann, and Dürrstein). These ébauches were described in LeCoultre’s sales catalogues as the “genre allemande” (the German type).

Tutima Hommage Minute Repeater in red gold with classic dial

Tutima Hommage Minute Repeater in red gold with classic dial

Assembling a Tutima Hommage Minute Repeater

Assembling a Tutima Hommage Minute Repeater

Saxon tones

The Hommage is a three-handed minute repeater conceived by Tutima from the ground up. The hand-wound Caliber 800 measures 32 mm in diameter and comprises 550 individual components; it beats at a frequency of 3 Hz/21,600 vph.

With a traditional matte, frosted, rose-gold-plated finish and a Glashütte three-quarter plate, this exceptional movement is directly identifiable as a product of its geographical location.

Movement top and bottom of the Tutima Hommage Minute Repeater

Movement top and bottom of the Tutima Hommage Minute Repeater

The steel repeater parts – every single one of which has been manufactured and tin-polished to perfection in Glashütte – culminate in the two gongs attached to the case for better resonance.

The chimes’ resonance was a subject of great consideration for Tutima’s Glashütte-based team. While Kurtz had his apprentices learn musical instruments to improve dexterity, Tutima chose to address the pitch and resonance of the repeater by turning to the acoustic labs of the TU Dresden and its Institut für Musikinstrumentenbau (the institute for making musical instruments at Dresden’s technical university) for selection and analysis.

The two notes of the repeating gongs (the ding and the dong) are thus in a major third interval, so as to emit a “joyful” sound.

Housed in a 43 mm case of solid pink gold or platinum, with the choice of a classic or skeletonized dial, this masterpiece is strictly limited to 25 pieces. “Our Hommage will remain just that,” Dieter Delecate said on May 12, 2011. “An homage.”

Tutima Hommage Minute Repeater on the wrist

Tutima Hommage Minute Repeater on the wrist

Tutima Hommage Minute Repeater in platinum with skeleton dial

Tutima Hommage Minute Repeater in platinum with skeleton dial

A word on the fine finishing

Tutima’s Hommage minute repeater is a high horology timepiece based on traditional Glashütte values, with particular emphasis on stability and exquisite finishing as dictated by the city’s horological founders.

Jörg Delectate explained to me that Kurtz also had a penchant for complicated watches, despite the fact that he can well be considered Saxony’s father of serial industrial manufacture.

Thus, the lion’s share of the new Tutima factory’s employees can be found in the finishing department, where the artisans grind, polish and file to achieve a most traditional Glashütte look for the Hommage’s movement.

Beautiful view through the display back of the Tutima Hommage Minute Repeater

Beautiful view through the display back of the Tutima Hommage Minute Repeater

The Hommage’s look does not involve later decoration techniques like Glashütte ribbing – which is basically côtes de Genève at a different angle – or perlage. Caliber 800 is polished and then matte rose-gold-plated for a frosted finish.

The finished movement looks vaguely English, and this is no accident: early Glashütte watchmaking was what we might consider very English in looks. All engravings on this movement, including the obvious clef note on the balance cock, are done by hand with no pre-cutting done by laser. The balance cock is engraved in relief (as opposed to flat engraving) as traditional Glashütte values dictate.

Polishing a steel spring for Tutima's minute repeating Caliber 800

Polishing a steel spring for Tutima’s minute repeating Caliber 800

The movement’s levers, bridges, and cocks, and all springs outside of the balance spring, are manufactured in-house. The hairspring comes from Precision Engineering, which is now part of the MELB group along with sister company Moser & Cie, though it may not be recognizable as such since its terminal curve is bent in-house to turn it into a Breguet-style hairspring.

The matching balance wheel is manufactured in Saxony and the weighted balance screws come from another Saxon supplier.

And, finally, in case you thought it might be a typo, the word homage with a double m used in the name of this watch is the German spelling, a foreign word taken directly from the French.

Tutima Hommage Minute Repeater in red gold with classic dial

Tutima Hommage Minute Repeater in red gold with classic dial

For more information, please visit www.tutima.com.

Quick Facts Tutima Hommage
Case: 43 mm, pink gold or platinum
Movement: manually wound Caliber 800
Functions: hours, minute, subsidiary seconds; hour, quarter-hour and minute repeater
Limitation: 25 pieces
Price: €168,000

8 replies
  1. José Arias
    José Arias says:
    May 28, 2021 at 5:21 pm

    Tutima hommage repeater minutes is amazing ,but only 25 pieces….unreachable
    https://guardatiempos.com/

    Reply

Trackbacks & Pingbacks

  1. What Defines A Handmade Mechanical Watch In The Modern World? – SaFonaGastroCrono says:
    July 30, 2020 at 12:22 am

    […] In 2011, when Tutima officially opened its Glashütte manufactory, one of the 15 technicians working there was a CNC operator who came from outside the watch industry and was described by the brand’s production head at the time as “a most creative engineer.” His problem-solving ability allowed the small manufacture to work with smaller tolerances and end up with better results for the brand’s minute repeater. […]

    Reply
  2. Made In Germany: The Glory Of Glashütte | Quill & Pad says:
    June 28, 2017 at 5:55 pm

    […] Hommage repeater literally rang in a new era in the company history and was soon followed by some amazing new lines […]

    Reply
  3. Give Me Five! 5 Fantastic Manufacture Chronographs From Baselworld 2017 By Patek Philippe, Fabergé, Louis Moinet, Tutima And Glashütte Original | Quill & Pad says:
    May 17, 2017 at 6:03 pm

    […] movement finish resembles that of the lovely Hommage minute repeater of 2011, which was introduced the same day that Tutima announced it had returned to its home city, […]

    Reply
  4. Tutima Tempostopp Flyback Chronograph: A Moving Homage To The History Of Glashütte | Quill & Pad says:
    April 25, 2017 at 4:59 pm

    […] docks into Tutima’s luxury line, which already includes the Patria models and the lovely Hommage minute repeater of 2011, which was introduced the same day that Tutima announced it had returned to its home city, […]

    Reply
  5. The Life And Times Of A. Lange & Söhne Re-Founder Walter Lange | Quill & Pad says:
    February 1, 2017 at 1:49 pm

    […] 25 Years Of German Reunification: Film Premiere How The Wall Came Tumbling Down: Made In Germany The Tutima Hommage Minute Repeater Chimes ‘Happy To Be Home’ Happy 90th Birthday To Walter Lange With A Look Back At The Modern A. Lange & […]

    Reply
  6. How The Wall Came Tumbling Down: Made In Germany | Quill & Pad says:
    January 30, 2017 at 12:45 pm

    […] * Tutima, a brand whose director fortunately fled to the West before the wall came down, and successfully reestablished there, in 2011 created the first repeating timepiece fully conceived, developed, produced and assembled on German soil. See The Tutima Hommage Minute Repeater Chimes ‘Happy To Be Home.’ […]

    Reply
  7. Quill & Pad | A. Lange & Söhne Looks Back On 20 Years Of The Lange 1 And 25 Years Of German Reunification: Film Premiere says:
    October 25, 2014 at 1:53 pm

    […] The Tutima Hommage Minute Repeater Chimes ‘Happy To Be Home’ by Elizabeth Doerr. […]

    Reply

Leave a Reply

Want to join the discussion?
Feel free to contribute!

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Categories

  • Watch Brands & Horology
    • New for 2025
    • New for 2024
    • New for 2023
    • Affordable Luxury
      • Swatch
      • Ball Watch
      • Louis Erard
      • Gorilla Fastback
      • Ikepod
      • Oris
      • Reservoir
    • Auctions
    • Behind the Lens
    • Boutiques
    • Collectors and Collecting
    • Events, Fairs & Exhibitions
    • Give Me Five!
    • History
    • Quill & Pad
    • Round Table
    • The Naked Watchmaker
    • Thoughts & Opinion
    • Video
    • WatchCharts
    • Wrist Watching
    • A. Lange & Söhne
    • AHCI
    • Akrivia
    • Andersen Genève
    • Alexandre Meerson
    • Andreas Strehler
    • Angelus
    • Antoine Martin
    • Antoine Preziuso
    • Armin Strom
    • Arnold & Son
    • Audemars Piguet
      • Royal Oak Offshore
    • Bélier
    • Bell & Ross
    • Blancpain
    • Bovet
    • Breguet
    • Bremont
    • Breitling
    • Bulgari
    • Carl F. Bucherer
    • Cartier
    • Chanel
    • Chopard
    • Christiaan Van Der Klaauw
    • Christophe Claret
    • Chronoswiss
    • Clocks
    • Corum
    • Cyrus
    • Czapek & Cie
    • De Bethune
    • de Grisogono
    • Derek Pratt
    • Dior
    • Divers' Watches
    • Eberhard
    • Emmanuel Bouchet
    • Fabergé
    • Ferdinand Berthoud
    • Fiona Krüger
    • F.P. Journe
    • Franck Muller
    • Garrick
    • Gérald Genta
    • Girard-Perregaux
    • Glashütte Original
    • GoS
    • Graff
    • Graham
    • Greubel Forsey
    • Grieb & Benzinger
    • Grönefeld
    • H. Moser & Cie
    • Habring2
    • Hajime Asaoka
    • Harry Winston
    • Hautlence
    • Hermès
    • Hublot
    • HYT
    • Independents
    • IWC
    • Jaeger-LeCoultre
    • Jaquet Droz
    • Jean Daniel Nicolas
    • Jean Dunand
    • Kari Voutilainen
    • Kees Engelbarts
    • Kobold
    • Konstantin Chaykin
    • Kudoke
    • Ladies watches
    • Lang & Heyne
    • Laurent Ferrier
    • Linde Werdelin
    • Louis Moinet
    • Louis Vuitton
    • Ludovic Ballouard
    • Manufacture Royale
    • Maurice Lacroix
    • MB&F
    • McGonigle
    • Ming Watches
    • Montblanc
    • Moritz Grossmann
    • Nomos Glashütte
    • Ochs und Junior
    • Officine Panerai
    • Omega
    • Parmigiani
    • Patek Philippe
    • Paul Gerber
    • Philippe Dufour
    • Piaget
    • Pocket watches
    • Rebellion
    • Ressence
    • RGM
    • Richard Mille
    • Roger Dubuis
    • Roger W Smith
    • Roland Iten
    • Rolex
    • Romain Gauthier
    • Romain Jerome
    • Sarpaneva
    • Schwarz-Etienne
    • Seiko
    • Silberstein
    • Singer Reimagined
    • Soviet / Eastern Europe watches
    • Speake-Marin
    • Struthers
    • Tag Heuer
    • Tudor
    • Tutima
    • Ulysse Nardin
    • Urban Jürgensen
    • Urwerk
    • Vacheron Constantin
    • Van Cleef & Arpels
    • Vianney Halter
    • Vintage
    • Wempe Glashütte
    • Zenith
  • Luxury, Experiences, Science & Nature
    • Arts
    • Book reviews
    • Cars
      • Porsche
    • Fashion & Grooming
    • Jewelry
    • Nature
    • Photo Captions
    • Photography
    • Science
    • Shoes
    • Sports
    • Technology
    • Travel
    • Wining, Dining and Cigars
    • Writing instruments
      • Caran d’Ache
      • Grayson Tighe
      • Montblanc
      • Montegrappa
  • General
    • Featured
    • Highlights
© Copyright - Quill & Pad - Enfold Theme by Kriesi
Scroll to top Scroll to top Scroll to top
We use cookies on our website to give you the most relevant experience by remembering your preferences and repeat visits. By clicking “Accept”, you consent to the use of ALL the cookies.
Do not sell my personal information.
Cookie SettingsAccept
Manage consent

Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may affect your browsing experience.
Necessary
Always Enabled
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. These cookies ensure basic functionalities and security features of the website, anonymously.
CookieDurationDescription
cookielawinfo-checkbox-analytics11 monthsThis cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Analytics".
cookielawinfo-checkbox-functional11 monthsThe cookie is set by GDPR cookie consent to record the user consent for the cookies in the category "Functional".
cookielawinfo-checkbox-necessary11 monthsThis cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookies is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Necessary".
cookielawinfo-checkbox-others11 monthsThis cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Other.
cookielawinfo-checkbox-performance11 monthsThis cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Performance".
viewed_cookie_policy11 monthsThe cookie is set by the GDPR Cookie Consent plugin and is used to store whether or not user has consented to the use of cookies. It does not store any personal data.
Functional
Functional cookies help to perform certain functionalities like sharing the content of the website on social media platforms, collect feedbacks, and other third-party features.
Performance
Performance cookies are used to understand and analyze the key performance indexes of the website which helps in delivering a better user experience for the visitors.
Analytics
Analytical cookies are used to understand how visitors interact with the website. These cookies help provide information on metrics the number of visitors, bounce rate, traffic source, etc.
Advertisement
Advertisement cookies are used to provide visitors with relevant ads and marketing campaigns. These cookies track visitors across websites and collect information to provide customized ads.
Others
Other uncategorized cookies are those that are being analyzed and have not been classified into a category as yet.
SAVE & ACCEPT