Editorial
Christiaan van der Klaauw built his reputation on astronomical complications, and the Real Moon Joure is the clearest expression of that obsession in a wearable package. The moonphase display requires correction only once every 122 years, a level of accuracy that outpaces almost every other watch on the market at any price. At 40mm in steel with a 96-hour power reserve, it is a serious tool for someone who actually cares about the moon.
Christiaan van der Klaauw founded his workshop in the Netherlands in 1974, building a practice around planetarium and astronomical complications at a time when most independent watchmakers were chasing simple elegance. The Real Moon line emerged as the brand's accessible entry point into precision moonphase, with the Joure variant named for the Dutch village where the movement work is done. The CVDK7382 caliber is produced in very small numbers, which keeps the brand under the radar of mainstream collectors but fiercely respected among those who track independent horology seriously.
Production began in 2014 and the reference has remained essentially unchanged, a sign the team got it right the first time. CVDK movements are not marketed for their finishing or their heritage story; they are engineered for accuracy, and the astronomical record backs that up.
The Real Moon Joure is genuinely obscure outside of independent watch circles, which makes valuation difficult and resale slow. Most buyers at auction are specialists, so you will not find a liquid secondary market the way you would with a Patek or even a mid-tier Swiss moonphase. Service parts require going back to CVDK directly or to a watchmaker with specific experience on the caliber, and the pool of qualified independents is small.
The moonphase accuracy is a genuine selling point but also a complexity: the mechanism is more intricate than a standard moonphase, and improper regulation after a service can degrade the 122-year accuracy claim significantly. Dial condition matters more than usual here because the moonphase aperture is the visual centerpiece and any scratching or moisture damage around it is immediately obvious.