Editorial
Roger W. Smith makes watches the way they were made two centuries ago: one at a time, by hand, on the Isle of Man, with a waiting list measured in years. The Series 1 is his starting point , a 36mm steel manual-wind carrying the co-axial escapement George Daniels invented and Smith inherited the right to build.
If you want a living piece of English horology, this is one of the very few places left to find it.
Smith trained directly under George Daniels in the 1990s and was the only watchmaker Daniels ever took on as an apprentice. When Daniels granted Smith a license to use the co-axial escapement, it passed genuine lineage rather than just a design file. The Series 1 launched as Smith's foundational reference, deliberately modest in scale at 36mm to keep the focus on the movement rather than the case.
Each watch is built almost entirely by a single pair of hands over three to six months, from raw materials to finished caliber, a process that limits annual output to a double-digit number of pieces. That constraint is not a marketing posture; it reflects what is actually possible when craftsmanship is the only method.
The waiting list is long and non-negotiable. Smith does not accelerate production for collectors with deeper pockets, so plan for a multi-year wait if ordering new. Secondary market examples appear rarely, and when they do, prices can run well above original retail because supply is genuinely finite rather than artificially restricted.
Provenance matters enormously here: insist on full documentation from Smith's workshop, as the small output makes fakes or frankenwatches a real risk when buying privately. The 36mm case sits noticeably small on larger wrists, which is a deliberate aesthetic choice rather than an oversight, so try one on before committing.