WHY DO WE DO THIS ON KICKSTARTER?

WHY DO WE DO THIS ON KICKSTARTER?

We launched this watch on Kickstarter because we believe in creating together with our community. This platform allows us to validate the design, adjust the last details and produce more efficiently, offering an exclusive watch at a special price. It’s not just a launch: it’s a way of inviting you to be part of the origin of a unique piece, from the first minute.

Find out before anyone else and be part of their history from the first second. 👉 Click and join us on this journey.

Only 30 units per model at an exceptional price for supporting us in the project.

We launched this watch on Kickstarter because we believe in creating together with our community. This platform allows us to validate the design, adjust the last details and produce more efficiently, offering an exclusive watch at a special price. It’s not just a launch: it’s a way of inviting you to be part of the origin of a unique piece, from the first minute.

Find out before anyone else and be part of their history from the first second. 👉 Click and join us on this journey.

Only 30 units per model at an exceptional price for supporting us in the project.

Limited to 299 pieces per model: each watch evolves with a unique patina.

Limited to 299 pieces per model: each watch evolves with a unique patina.

A great watch is not defined only by its design, but by the combination of history, materials and craftsmanship.
The Holy Trinity Collection is built with the same philosophy that shaped the most powerful warship of its time: strength, precision, and purpose.
A vivid bronze case, sapphire crystal, a reliable automatic movement and a 3D sculpted dial bring the ship’s legacy to life.
Every detail is chosen to endure, evolve and tell a story forged by time and the sea.

A great watch is not defined only by its design, but by the combination of history, materials and craftsmanship.
The Holy Trinity Collection is built with the same philosophy that shaped the most powerful warship of its time: strength, precision, and purpose.
A vivid bronze case, sapphire crystal, a reliable automatic movement and a 3D sculpted dial bring the ship’s legacy to life.
Every detail is chosen to endure, evolve and tell a story forged by time and the sea.

Who are we?

Colomer and Sons is a Spanish watchmaker dedicated to combining narrative, craftsmanship and mechanical excellence. We create watches that honor history and are made to last. We have been trying to revolutionise luxury watchmaking for more than 19 years, offering magnificent pieces at affordable prices and with a 10-year warranty.

Automatic bronze watches inspired by the legendary eighteenth-century Spanish warship, the Santísima Trinidad.

A great watch is not defined only by its design, but by the combination of history, materials and craftsmanship. The Santísima Trinidad Collection is built with the same philosophy that shaped the most powerful warship of its time: endurance, precision, and purpose. A vivid bronze case, sapphire crystal, a reliable automatic movement and a 3D sculpted dial bring the ship’s legacy to life. Every detail has been chosen to endure, evolve and tell a story marked by time and the sea.

“Close-up photograph of the prototype”

The Legend Behind the Clock

The Santísima Trinidad was not just a ship, it was a declaration of intent. Four decks. More than 140 cannons. The most powerful warship of the eighteenth century and a symbol of Spanish naval mastery. Centuries later, his spirit returns… not as a relic in a museum, but as a mechanical watch designed to be worn, admired, and passed down.

Our goal with this project: To merge the grandeur of history with the craftsmanship of modern watchmaking.

Why bronze? A material with a story to tell

Bronze is alive. Change. Evolve.
Like the Santísima Trinidad, whose cannons, fittings and structural elements were made of bronze, a metal chosen for its durability and beauty.

Your watch begins its journey bright and golden…
and gradually develops a unique patina shaped by moisture, sunlight, salt, and time.

No two watches age the same.
Her piece becomes a personal heirloom, a living tribute to the ship that inspired her.

“The patina evolves naturally, influenced by time and environmental conditions.”

“The patina evolves naturally, influenced by time and environmental conditions.”

THE COLLECTION

The Holy Trinity Collection is a tribute to time shaped by the sea.
Inspired by the most powerful warship of the 18th century, each watch conveys the spirit of long voyages, bronze cannons and disciplined handling.
Forged from live bronze and powered by a mechanical heart, these watches evolve with each journey, recording salt, air, and movement.
More than watches, they are companions for exploration: each one ages differently and tells its own story.

ADMIRAL BLUE – ALMIRANTE AZUL

“Inspired by open water and constant handling, Admiral Blue reflects the depth, calm and infinite movement of the sea.”

MIDNGHT BLACK – MIDNIGHT BLACK

“Born from night seas and silent horizons, Midnight Black captures the mystery and power of night navigation.”

ROYAL BRONZE – BRONCE REAL

“Born of noble banners and ocean winds, the Royal Bronze evolves over time, carrying the memory of each voyage.”

Modern engineering meets old-world heritage

It is never easy to choose a reliable movement manufacturer, but after more than 10 years of experience testing most Swiss, Japanese, and Chinese mechanical movements, we concluded that Miyota Japanese mechanical movements are just as good as Swiss ones but with a better price, making them more affordable for customers.

Modern engineering meets old-world heritage

It is never easy to choose a reliable movement manufacturer, but after more than 10 years of experience testing most Swiss, Japanese, and Chinese mechanical movements, we concluded that Miyota Japanese mechanical movements are just as good as Swiss ones but with a better price, making them more affordable for customers.

What Each Sponsor Receives

1 Holy Trinity watch (model to choose).

    • 10 years warranty.
    • Miyota 8215 automatic movement.
    • Sapphire crystal.
    • Night vision.
    • Screw down crown.
    • Dial with 3D boat.
    • Water resistant up to 20 ATM.
    • Leather strap.

Limited edition of 299 units per model.

    • Premium leather strap.
    • Gift NATO strap (if we reach our goal).
    • Limited Edition Certificate.
    • 10-year international warranty.

What Each Sponsor Receives

1 Holy Trinity watch (model to choose).

    • 10 years warranty.
    • Miyota 8215 automatic movement.
    • Sapphire crystal.
    • Night vision.
    • Screw down crown.
    • Dial with 3D boat.
    • Water resistant up to 20 ATM.
    • Leather strap.

Limited edition of 299 units per model.

    • Premium leather strap.
    • Gift NATO strap (if we reach our goal).
    • Limited Edition Certificate.
    • 10-year international warranty.

Goal to achieve

Funding target: €18,000

Once the campaign reaches this goal, each sponsor will receive an additional NATO strap, inspired by classic naval and military equipment.

Designed for durability and comfort, this strap reinforces the seafaring spirit of the Santísima Trinidad and offers a more casual way to wear the watch.

✔ Included for all sponsors
✔ No additional cost
✔ Automatically added to your reward

Unlocked together. Delivered together.

Goal to achieve

Funding target: €18,000

Once the campaign reaches this goal, each sponsor will receive an additional NATO strap, inspired by classic naval and military equipment.

Designed for durability and comfort, this strap reinforces the seafaring spirit of the Santísima Trinidad and offers a more casual way to wear the watch.

✔ Included for all sponsors
✔ No additional cost
✔ Automatically added to your reward

Unlocked together. Delivered together.

10 Year Warranty

We are one of the few brands in the world that offers a ten-year warranty on its watches.

At Colomer & Sons, you will have a team of qualified watch technicians at your service, as well as all the parts necessary for the care and repair of your watch, not only during the 10-year warranty we offer on all our models, but also to keep it in perfect condition for decades.

10 Year Warranty

We are one of the few brands in the world that offers a ten-year warranty on its watches.

At Colomer & Sons, you will have a team of qualified watch technicians at your service, as well as all the parts necessary for the care and repair of your watch, not only during the 10-year warranty we offer on all our models, but also to keep it in perfect condition for decades.

Honest Pricing

High-quality watches usually come with a very high price tag. Our prices with a 10-year warranty are low because we are changing the way we work and we have no intermediaries between the product and the customer. That was the idea of Colomer & Sons from its beginnings.

🟢 HOW TO BUY ON KICKSTARTER?

Buying on Kickstarter is very simple:

1️⃣ Enter the project and choose the reward you prefer.
2️⃣ Click on “Support this project”.
3️⃣ Create an account (or log in) with your email.
4️⃣ Enter your details and payment method.
5️⃣ Confirm your support.

👉 No charge is made until the product has achieved the goal, and you will receive project updates until your watch is shipped.

It’s a safe and direct way to support exclusive projects from launch.

Honest Pricing

High-quality watches usually come with a very high price tag. Our prices with a 10-year warranty are low because we are changing the way we work and we have no intermediaries between the product and the customer. That was the idea of Colomer & Sons from its beginnings.

🟢 HOW TO BUY ON KICKSTARTER?

Buying on Kickstarter is very simple:

1️⃣ Enter the project and choose the reward you prefer.
2️⃣ Click on “Support this project”.
3️⃣ Create an account (or log in) with your email.
4️⃣ Enter your details and payment method.
5️⃣ Confirm your support.

👉 No charge is made until the product has achieved the goal, and you will receive project updates until your watch is shipped.

It’s a safe and direct way to support exclusive projects from launch.

The incredible story behind the ship

In 1749, a mysterious mathematician was wandering the Thames Dockyards in London. Under the wig of this apparently harmless intellectual hid the best captain of the Spanish Navy, on a suicidal mission: to steal England’s naval secrets. Jorge Juan.

Jorge Juan y Santacilia was not just any sailor. Nicknamed the “Spanish Sage”, at the age of 21 he had already amazed Europe after being chosen to accompany the French expedition to Peru with the aim of measuring the arc of the meridian and determining the true shape of the Earth.

He spent ten years in the Andes, measuring mountains and stars in extreme conditions alongside Antonio de Ulloa. There he proved that Newton was right and that the Earth was flattened at the poles. He returned to Europe consecrated as one of the most brilliant minds of the century.

But on his return, the king and the Marquis of Ensenada had prepared another job for him. The Spanish Armada was in crisis; Their ships were slow and heavy compared to the British, so they urgently needed to modernize their fleet, and the technology was in London.
Jorge Juan accepted the most dangerous mission of his life and traveled incognito to the enemy capital. His objective was not only to copy plans; it was “brain stealing”, as he had to convince the best English shipbuilders to betray their country and move to Spain.

For months, he frequented taverns and docks, recruiting engineers dissatisfied with their salaries. He promised them gold, honours and religious freedom in Spain, operating under the noses of the British Admiralty and sending encrypted information to Madrid.

The operation was a resounding success, but dangerous. He managed to recruit dozens of elite technicians; however, British counterintelligence became suspicious of this “Mr. Joshua,” who asked too many questions about wood and keels.

He had to flee London in a hurry. He disguised himself as a sailor on a merchant ship, the “Santa Ana”, and crossed the English Channel just before the police could arrest him. He narrowly escaped the gallows, but took with him the maritime knowledge of the Royal Navy.
Back in Spain, Jorge Juan did not limit himself to copying what he had stolen, but improved it. Together with English engineers, he revolutionized the shipyards of Ferrol, Cartagena and La Carraca, creating a hybrid construction system that combined Spanish robustness with English speed.
He applied mathematics to navigation like no one before, calculating the water resistance, the center of gravity of ships, and the tension of sails, transforming shipbuilding, which had been a carpenter’s art, into an engineer’s science.
Under his direction, Spain built some of the best ships in history, such as the “Santísima Trinidad”, whose technological base comes from his renovations. They were so good that, years later, at Trafalgar, the English preferred to capture them intact rather than sink them.

But Jorge Juan knew that ships do not sail alone, so he founded the Royal Naval Observatory and the Literary and Friendship Assembly. He wanted enlightened officers, experts in astronomy and mathematics, not only in artillery, and thus raised the intellectual level of the entire Navy.
Their integrity was as strong as their ships. When he discovered that rotten wood was being used due to corruption, he wrote scathing reports to the King. He didn’t mind making enemies at court if it meant saving lives at sea.
He paid a high personal price. Stress and political strife undermined his health; he suffered from severe gallstones, but continued to work until the end, writing his masterpiece, “Examen Maritime”, which was translated into all European languages and became a reference work.
He died in Madrid in 1773. He was so respected that even his enemies paid homage to him. He was a Knight of the Order of Malta, Aliaga Commander and Squadron Leader, but above all, he was the man who proved that science is the patriot’s best weapon.

If he had been born in London or Paris, today there would be dozens of Hollywood blockbusters telling his story, but since he was born in Spain, we dedicate a coin to him. He was a real-life James Bond, a spy who used the sextant and integral calculus to alter the global balance of power.

 

The incredible story behind the ship

In 1749, a mysterious mathematician was wandering the Thames Dockyards in London. Under the wig of this apparently harmless intellectual hid the best captain of the Spanish Navy, on a suicidal mission: to steal England’s naval secrets. Jorge Juan.

Jorge Juan y Santacilia was not just any sailor. Nicknamed the “Spanish Sage”, at the age of 21 he had already amazed Europe after being chosen to accompany the French expedition to Peru with the aim of measuring the arc of the meridian and determining the true shape of the Earth.

He spent ten years in the Andes, measuring mountains and stars in extreme conditions alongside Antonio de Ulloa. There he proved that Newton was right and that the Earth was flattened at the poles. He returned to Europe consecrated as one of the most brilliant minds of the century.

But on his return, the king and the Marquis of Ensenada had prepared another job for him. The Spanish Armada was in crisis; Their ships were slow and heavy compared to the British, so they urgently needed to modernize their fleet, and the technology was in London.
Jorge Juan accepted the most dangerous mission of his life and traveled incognito to the enemy capital. His objective was not only to copy plans; it was “brain stealing”, as he had to convince the best English shipbuilders to betray their country and move to Spain.

For months, he frequented taverns and docks, recruiting engineers dissatisfied with their salaries. He promised them gold, honours and religious freedom in Spain, operating under the noses of the British Admiralty and sending encrypted information to Madrid.

The operation was a resounding success, but dangerous. He managed to recruit dozens of elite technicians; however, British counterintelligence became suspicious of this “Mr. Joshua,” who asked too many questions about wood and keels.

He had to flee London in a hurry. He disguised himself as a sailor on a merchant ship, the “Santa Ana”, and crossed the English Channel just before the police could arrest him. He narrowly escaped the gallows, but took with him the maritime knowledge of the Royal Navy.
Back in Spain, Jorge Juan did not limit himself to copying what he had stolen, but improved it. Together with English engineers, he revolutionized the shipyards of Ferrol, Cartagena and La Carraca, creating a hybrid construction system that combined Spanish robustness with English speed.
He applied mathematics to navigation like no one before, calculating the water resistance, the center of gravity of ships, and the tension of sails, transforming shipbuilding, which had been a carpenter’s art, into an engineer’s science.
Under his direction, Spain built some of the best ships in history, such as the “Santísima Trinidad”, whose technological base comes from his renovations. They were so good that, years later, at Trafalgar, the English preferred to capture them intact rather than sink them.

But Jorge Juan knew that ships do not sail alone, so he founded the Royal Naval Observatory and the Literary and Friendship Assembly. He wanted enlightened officers, experts in astronomy and mathematics, not only in artillery, and thus raised the intellectual level of the entire Navy.
Their integrity was as strong as their ships. When he discovered that rotten wood was being used due to corruption, he wrote scathing reports to the King. He didn’t mind making enemies at court if it meant saving lives at sea.
He paid a high personal price. Stress and political strife undermined his health; he suffered from severe gallstones, but continued to work until the end, writing his masterpiece, “Examen Maritime”, which was translated into all European languages and became a reference work.
He died in Madrid in 1773. He was so respected that even his enemies paid homage to him. He was a Knight of the Order of Malta, Aliaga Commander and Squadron Leader, but above all, he was the man who proved that science is the patriot’s best weapon.

If he had been born in London or Paris, today there would be dozens of Hollywood blockbusters telling his story, but since he was born in Spain, we dedicate a coin to him. He was a real-life James Bond, a spy who used the sextant and integral calculus to alter the global balance of power.

 

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