Watchatlas

Bovet / Dimier

Bovet Dimier

Collection profile · 2006

Dimier is Bovet’s contemporary case family, defined by the crown at 3 o’clock and used across some of the maison’s most technical and complicated watch expressions, balancing modern ergonomics with the house’s highly decorative haute horlogerie approach.

Why it matters

Dimier is important because it gives Bovet a more conventional wristwatch case architecture than the historic bow-at-12 o’clock Fleurier format, making the maison’s complications easier to wear in modern daily use.

Key references

Dimier

Dimier Collection — Official collections page describing the Dimier case and its crown-at-3-o’clock configuration.

Récital 30

The Récital 30 — Official Dimier model page for a world timer within the collection.

Récital 12

The Récital 12 — Official Dimier model page highlighting Bovet’s first watch on an integrated bracelet in more than 200 years.

Collection timeline

  • 2024 — Bovet’s collections page continued to present Dimier as a core collection family with the crown positioned at 3 o’clock.
  • 2024 — Current Dimier references on the official site included the Récital 30 world timer and Récital 12 bracelet watch.
  • 2024 — Bovet’s brand messaging continued to distinguish Dimier from Fleurier as part of the maison’s modern collection structure.

FAQ

What defines a Dimier case?

Bovet describes the Dimier collection as having the crown positioned at 3 o’clock.

Is Dimier a complication line or a case family?

It functions as a case family used across multiple Bovet complications and models.

Official collection ↗

Back to brand

More from Bovet

  • Récital — Bovet's Récital subfamily gathers the maison's most architectural Dimier complications, including world-time, hemispherical display, and modern case experiments that use the sloped writing-desk case profile as a stage for grand horological display.
  • Fleurier — Bovet's Fleurier collection is the maison's classic-leaning line for refined, highly finished timepieces, spanning skeletonized modern pieces, flying-tourbillon executions, and heritage-inspired watches tied to the house's Fleurier identity.

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