- Sale
-
Brands A-Z
FeaturedBrands A-Z
-
Rolex
FeaturedBy Collection
- Patek Philippe
- Rolex Certified Pre-Owned
-
Mens
By TypePopular StylesBy EditPopular Brands
-
Ladies
By TypePopular StylesBy EditPopular Brands
-
Pre-Owned
Popular Brands
-
Sell Your Watch
Sell your watchWe will expertly assess your watch and offer you
a competitive and accurate valuation for the
watch you wish to sell to us.Free Instant Valuation
Drop off at any Showroom
Unrivalled Knowledge & Expertise- Calibre - Watch News & Stories
- Calibre - Watch News & Stories
- Shop by Category
- Sale
-
Brands A-Z
- Back
- View All Brands
-
Brands
- Arnold & Son
- BALL
- Bamford
- Baume & Mercier
- Bell & Ross
- Blancpain
- BOVET
- Breguet
- Breitling
- Bremont
- BVLGARI
- Cartier
- Certina
- CHANEL
- Chopard
- Czapek
- DOXA
- Frederique Constant
- Garmin
- Gerald Charles
- Girard-Perregaux
- Glashütte Original
- Grand Seiko
- Gucci
- Hamilton
- H. Moser & Cie.
- Hublot
- ID Genève
- IKEPOD
- IWC Schaffhausen
- Jacob & Co
- Jaeger-LeCoultre
- Shop The Collection
- Kross Studio
- Longines
- Louis Erard
- Maurice Lacroix
- MB&F
- Montblanc
- Nivada Grenchen
- NOMOS Glashütte
- NORQAIN
- OMEGA
- Oris
- Panerai
- Parmigiani Fleurier
- Patek Philippe
- Piaget
- QLOCKTWO
- Rado
- RAYMOND WEIL
- Rolex
- Rolex Certified Pre-Owned
- Seiko
- Speake-Marin
- TAG Heuer
- Tissot
- TUDOR
- Ulysse Nardin
- Vacheron Constantin
- William Wood Watches
- WOLF
- ZENITH
- Rolex
- Patek Philippe
- Rolex Certified Pre-Owned
- Mens
- Ladies
-
Pre-Owned
- Back
- Shop All Pre-Owned
- Pre-Owned Home
- By Category
-
By Brand
- Certified Pre-Owned Rolex
- Pre-Owned Patek Philippe
- Pre-Owned Cartier
- Pre-Owned OMEGA
- Pre-Owned Breitling
- Pre-Owned TAG Heuer
- Pre-Owned TUDOR
- Pre-Owned Jaeger-LeCoultre
- Pre-Owned IWC Schaffhausen
- Pre-Owned Blancpain
- Pre-Owned Breguet
- Pre-Owned Chopard
- Pre-Owned Panerai
- Pre-Owned Rado
- Pre-Owned Vacheron Constantin
- Pre-Owned ZENITH
- Shop All Pre-Owned
- Sell Your Watch
- Calibre - Watch News & Stories
- My Account
- Wishlist
- Store Finder
- Book an Appointment
- Help & Support
WATCH LOVE STORIES: The Rolex that is part of the family
By Ming Liu | 3 minute read

As a watch journalist, I've long written about watches as multigenerational heirloom pieces - as treasured, inherited items that symbolise time and timelessness. Despite having owned watches for as long as I can remember, they were always functional pieces that never encapsulated those great notions of family, legacy and collectability that I had so often written about.
All that changed when, aged 35, I inherited a Rolex Datejust from my grandmother.
I didn't know this particular watch existed. But its gold and steel finish, gold dial and Jubilee bracelet were instantly familiar. My parents wore the same Rolex Datejusts, which two decades before they had bought as a pair to mark their 20th wedding anniversary. But, unbeknownst to me, they'd also purchased a third one for my grandmother. This was the watch I'd later inherit.
In 1993, when my parents first bought matching watches, I have to admit that the concept was somewhat lost on me. As a spotty, petulant teenager growing up in Taipei, I certainly couldn't relate to the achievement of a long marriage, and I just about got the sense that buying a Rolex was a big deal. In the ensuing years, however, those bi-metal Datejusts became a part of my daily life: they were my parents' 'everyday' watches, in every sense of the word - worn 24/7, in the shower, when sleeping, doing chores around the house, going out in the evenings. Images of them wearing the watches are still engrained in my mind; most indelible, of all things, is how loosely they wore them (and still do today): slipped slightly off centre, on the wrist's outer edge, just hugging the pisiform bone. And because they were matching, two watches worn in sync, my Rolex today has become a kind of signifier: for unity, stability, even normalcy.
The watch was my grandmother's but, with its backstory of sibling watches, it's ultimately a timepiece linked to my parents' bond. I haven't seen my mother and father for nearly two years because of the pandemic (as is the case for so many). I wore my Rolex a lot during lockdown. It reminds me of them, obviously - there's something very comforting about looking down at my wrist knowing that, somewhere across the world, my mum and dad are wearing pretty much the same exact watch. But it's also extremely wearable. As any Rolex owner will tell you, these are incomparably bulletproof, versatile tool watches. No wonder my parents wore them every day.
My grandmother's Datejust also marks a turning point in my relationship to horology. As mentioned before, watches had only ever been functional: Swatches featured regularly in my youth and later they played the role of fashion statement. There was a bracelet-style Gucci 19001 that was very minimalist 1990s, and a link-style Hermes Heure H that I bought on a trip to Paris. I wore a light blue Casio Baby-G for years, most memorably as a faithful companion on a belated gap year in South America.
But the Rolex was my first grown-up watch. I've had a family of my own since the watch joined my collection, and it's influenced every subsequent horological purchase. When I was pregnant with my first child, I picked up a vintage Patek Philippe at Christie's New York, and later a Jaeger-Lecoultre Reverso marked his birth. All recent watch purchases have also pretty much been unisex, with the intention of eventually passing them down to my sons.
My grandmother died last February and, for whatever reason, I never asked her why she was given a watch linked to my parents' 20th wedding anniversary. Was it a token of thanks - ie perhaps she helped my parents out when they first married? And was my grandfather gifted a matching watch too? I must ask mum and dad when we're finally, finally reunited.
Ming Liu writes for the Financial Times, New York Times and Vogue, and is the watch and jewellery editor of The Glossary magazine. Her column, Talking Time, is on @wristcheckSign Up For Calibre Newsletter
Get a round up of the latest stories from Calibre every month, directly to your inbox.
© 2025 Watches of Switzerland
Watches of Switzerland is a trading name of Watches of Switzerland Company Limited. Registered Office: Aurum House, 2 Elland Road, Braunstone, Leicester, LE3 1TT, Registered in England and Wales, Company number 00146087. Registered VAT Number 834 8634 04. Watches of Switzerland Company Limited acts as a broker and not a lender and offers finance from Secure Trust Bank PLC trading as V12 Retail Finance and PayPal UK Ltd, 5 Fleet Place, London, United Kingdom, EC4M 7RD trading as PayPal Credit. Watches of Switzerland Company Limited is authorised and regulated by the Finance Conduct Authority. Our registration number is 308710. *Credit is provided subject to affordability, age and status. Minimum spend applies. Terms and Conditions apply. UK residents only. Not all products are regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority and FOS protection will not be extended to unregulated agreements. Please note the Consumer Credit Act states that should your purchase / loan amount cost more than £30,000 you will not be covered under Section 75 of the Consumer Credit Act.
*Next day delivery available on most items. See product pages for more information.