sheepdoll
·Greetings all;
My name is Julie. I have been collecting Omega watches and ephemera since the 1990s. At the time I worked for Apple. My expertise is in the postscript printing language. I was what they called a 'Postscript Guru.'
My real interest is in the Jaquet-Droz automatons. Which I have extensively studied and am building a replica. I was also a member of the NAWCC during the 1990s and secretary of the San Francisco chapter. I have a complete watch shop which I collected. Sadly I was told I was to old (when in my 30s) for WOSTEP. So I never got any formal training.
After I aged out of the tech industry at 40, I took up working on pipe organs. specifically fairground organs. I use my watch bench to work on microelectronics. What are called microcontrollers. I design and repair relay systems for theater pipe organs. Some of this involves scanning the old paper rolls (and books) which are then converted to MIDI.
I have not done much with my watches in the last 15 to 18 years. Recently I was invited to Bern to give a lecture on piano roll scanning with postscript at the Hochshule der Kunst. I did not have time to get to Bienne, but last a last minute change of plan did get me a day trip to Neuchâtel.
Part of the reason I stopped working on watches was I needed a mainspring for a caliber 650. The recent trip revived interest in my Omega collection which is comprehensive. I have been watching you tube repair videos and am considering updating some tools and getting back into watchmaking. Sadly I have lost the click for the 650. I found a movement on ebay - so we will see how that goes.
I never liked any watch stuff online, as the first spammers used watches as goats to attract attention. However I have been checking this forum out for a bit. What I would really like to find is a safe way to swap and trade like the old NAWCC marts were before the my friends died and e-Bay ruined the fun of watch collecting.
I did get my collection out of storage and to some quick pix of it and some of the spares I have.
I did look up the speedmaster and it is a 105.012, One of my favorites. The seamaster chronostop is my everyday watch (I put it here for completeness.) Fount a T17 when I was reading these forums. Might be a fun one to see if I can find more parts for it and clean it up. The 650 is not shown as that is on the bench.
I also have other drawers in the benches full of 'generic' Swiss watches and parts. The one thing I do not have and avoided like the plague is a brand that starts with 'R.' At the end I was mostly focusing on complications from the Valle de Joux, which gave the name of my website delectra (dot com) the full name is actually Delectra Jouets and Cie which is really bad french grammar for the 'delightful toy company..
Doubt I will post much. More of a lurker. I have projects enough for 500 years and hardly any time to work on any of them.
-j
My name is Julie. I have been collecting Omega watches and ephemera since the 1990s. At the time I worked for Apple. My expertise is in the postscript printing language. I was what they called a 'Postscript Guru.'
My real interest is in the Jaquet-Droz automatons. Which I have extensively studied and am building a replica. I was also a member of the NAWCC during the 1990s and secretary of the San Francisco chapter. I have a complete watch shop which I collected. Sadly I was told I was to old (when in my 30s) for WOSTEP. So I never got any formal training.
After I aged out of the tech industry at 40, I took up working on pipe organs. specifically fairground organs. I use my watch bench to work on microelectronics. What are called microcontrollers. I design and repair relay systems for theater pipe organs. Some of this involves scanning the old paper rolls (and books) which are then converted to MIDI.
I have not done much with my watches in the last 15 to 18 years. Recently I was invited to Bern to give a lecture on piano roll scanning with postscript at the Hochshule der Kunst. I did not have time to get to Bienne, but last a last minute change of plan did get me a day trip to Neuchâtel.
Part of the reason I stopped working on watches was I needed a mainspring for a caliber 650. The recent trip revived interest in my Omega collection which is comprehensive. I have been watching you tube repair videos and am considering updating some tools and getting back into watchmaking. Sadly I have lost the click for the 650. I found a movement on ebay - so we will see how that goes.
I never liked any watch stuff online, as the first spammers used watches as goats to attract attention. However I have been checking this forum out for a bit. What I would really like to find is a safe way to swap and trade like the old NAWCC marts were before the my friends died and e-Bay ruined the fun of watch collecting.
I did get my collection out of storage and to some quick pix of it and some of the spares I have.
I did look up the speedmaster and it is a 105.012, One of my favorites. The seamaster chronostop is my everyday watch (I put it here for completeness.) Fount a T17 when I was reading these forums. Might be a fun one to see if I can find more parts for it and clean it up. The 650 is not shown as that is on the bench.
I also have other drawers in the benches full of 'generic' Swiss watches and parts. The one thing I do not have and avoided like the plague is a brand that starts with 'R.' At the end I was mostly focusing on complications from the Valle de Joux, which gave the name of my website delectra (dot com) the full name is actually Delectra Jouets and Cie which is really bad french grammar for the 'delightful toy company..
Doubt I will post much. More of a lurker. I have projects enough for 500 years and hardly any time to work on any of them.
-j




