Editorial
Stepan Sarpaneva makes roughly 50 watches a year by hand in Helsinki, and the Korona K0 is where his craft is most concentrated. The moonphase disc depicts the Finnish forest under a rising moon, and no two discs are identical. At 39mm in steel it wears like a serious dress watch made by someone who actually knows the forest it depicts.
Sarpaneva trained in Switzerland before returning to Finland to build his own workshop. The Korona line launched around 2010 as his signature piece, anchored by the hand-painted or individually rendered moonphase disc. The K0 designation marks the 39mm steel variant, the most accessible entry into the range.
Stepan does all the movement finishing and disc work himself or with a tiny team, which is why annual production stays around 50 pieces. The Finnish forest imagery is not decorative branding , it reflects where he lives and works, and that specificity is what separates this from generic moonphase watches.
Because each moonphase disc is unique artwork, there is no "standard" reference point for condition , you need to see the actual disc in photos before buying. Some earlier examples have more naively rendered forest scenes; later ones tend toward finer detail, so production year matters aesthetically. The Soprod A10 base is a competent Swiss lever movement but it is not exotic, and some buyers feel that mismatch against the price.
Parts availability for the custom moonphase module runs through Sarpaneva directly, which is fine while he is active but worth thinking about long-term. Pre-owned pricing is thin , the secondary market is small enough that you may wait months for a clean example to surface.