Factories
Pictured: Closeup of Hamilton Watch Company Melamine Dial Showing Cracks, c.1952. After the experimental batches of the new melamine dials proved to be a success, the Hamilton Watch Company met.
Pictured: Melamine Dials Throughout Production, Excerpt from “Research Provides New Materials For R.R. Type Dials,” Timely Topics, July 1953. Following extensive experimentation with nearly forty materials to find a suitable.
![The Hamilton Watch Company Melamine Dial: Commercialization of Melamine img](https://blog.pocketwatchdatabase.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/Melamine-Dinnerware-Nov1953-1024x1024.jpg)
Pictured: Elgin National Watch Company Metal Dial, c.1925 In the February 1926 issue of The Watch Word, the Elgin National Watch Company described the process used at the factory to.
Pictured: Elgin National Watch Company Metal Dial, c.1925 In the February 1926 issue of The Watch Word, the Elgin National Watch Company described the process used at the factory to.
Pictured: Waltham “Colonial Series” Advertisement, Published in the May 1908 Issue of The Keystone The trend of thin watches in America was spurred around 1904 with the introduction of “extra.
Pictured: The Lancaster Watch Company Factory, Published in History of Lancaster County, Pennsylvania by Ellis and Evans, 1883 The accompanying image represents the Lancaster Watch Company factory as it appeared.
![Celluloid “French Ivory” Watch Dials from the Keystone Watch Company img](https://blog.pocketwatchdatabase.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/Keystone-Watch-Company-Celluloid-Dial-1024x1024.jpg)