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	<title>unique piece &#8211; Time-Telling Magazine</title>
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		<title>Arabic Caligraphy Meets Traditional Watchmaking in A Family Affair.</title>
		<link>https://timetellingmagazine.com/arabic-caligraphy-meets-traditional-watchmaking-a-family-affair/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Mr. Walid Benla]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 05 Dec 2025 14:52:27 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[There are some projects I cover for Time Telling Magazine because they are interesting, and others because they feel like an ongoing conversation between me and the people behind them, and this one definitely belongs to the second group. Especially because it sits in a place I personally love, a place where Arabic artistic identity &#8230; <p class="link-more"><a href="https://timetellingmagazine.com/arabic-caligraphy-meets-traditional-watchmaking-a-family-affair/" class="more-link">Read more<span class="screen-reader-text"> "Arabic Caligraphy Meets Traditional Watchmaking in A Family Affair."</span></a></p>]]></description>
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<p>There are some projects I cover for Time Telling Magazine because they are interesting, and others because they feel like an ongoing conversation between me and the people behind them, and this one definitely belongs to the second group. Especially because it sits in a place I personally love, a place where Arabic artistic identity meets European watchmaking know-how (le savoir faire), and I always feel like that combination creates something that feels both ancient and modern at the same time. Whenever <a href="https://www.instagram.com/abdulaziz.alkhanji/" data-type="link" data-id="https://www.instagram.com/abdulaziz.alkhanji/">Abdulaziz </a>and Arnaud work together, it feels like two worlds meeting somewhere in the middle, one driven by emotion and language, the other by precision and craft, and I think that is exactly why I naturally found myself pulled into this new story (again).</p>



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<p>So when Abdulaziz told me about this new watch, he started the story very casually, the way he always does. He said his brother in law is the typical tech person who loves devices and numbers, but really hates having anything on his wrist. Nothing at all. Which already makes the idea of building him a watch kind of funny. But before his birthday, Abdulaziz’s sister told him she wanted a watch made specifically for her husband. Not bought, made. Something personal enough that even a person who does not like watches would probably wear it anyway. I immediately understood what she meant because their relationship has this warm and positive energy that you can actually see.</p>



<p>Their family even has a phrase that belongs to them. They always say “أبرك الساعات”, and for anyone who does not speak Arabic, it means something like “the luckiest hours” or “the most blessed moments”. It is the short version of another phrase they say, “أبرك الساعات اللي شفتك فيها”, which means “the most blessed hours are the ones in which I saw you”. It is one of those lines that becomes part of a couple’s identity, very natural, sentimental in an effortless way, and extremely personal. That is why Abdulaziz placed the short version on the dial. It belongs there. It carries their warmth.</p>



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<p>Since the phrase needed to look as meaningful as it sounds, he asked <a href="https://www.instagram.com/j_alnasrallah?igsh=MWh5OWRraXMxY2p0bA==" data-type="link" data-id="https://www.instagram.com/j_alnasrallah?igsh=MWh5OWRraXMxY2p0bA==">Jassim Alnasrallah</a> to write it. If you know Jassim’s style, you already understand why he is the right person. He writes calligraphy like he is building a structure. He chose Thuluth script, which has a formal and elegant tone, and he composed the words in an oval shape that guides your eyes naturally around the dial. Even the tiny details, like the dots and the little hamza and the miniature kaf (look these up), were arranged so that they line up symbolically with the main hours on the watch, meaning three, six, nine and twelve. It’s the type of detail no one notices unless someone points it out, but once you know it, you feel the intention behind it.</p>



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<p>Then the whole thing went to Arnaud from L’Artisan Horloger, who now knows exactly what happens each time Abdulaziz brings him a new idea. The first thing he told me was that this was his first experience with something like this, and that it was eye opening, that Abdulaziz always pushes him to new places.&nbsp;<br></p>



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<p>They are actually developing four different stone dial variations for this calligraphy collection (hence my journalistic involvement), Lapis Lazuli, Meteorite, Tahitian mother of pearl with a blue tone, and white mother of pearl.&nbsp;</p>



<p>The calligraphy itself is laser cut in a very thin stainless steel, brushed so it has texture, and it is extremely delicate. Arnaud told me it was the most fragile and meticulous part he has ever worked with, especially on the meteorite dial which has an uneven surface that makes everything more difficult.</p>



<figure class="wp-block-image aligncenter size-full"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" width="900" height="1200" src="https://timetellingmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/591259155_817849207919829_3424850963573964314_n.jpg" alt="" class="wp-image-8919" style="aspect-ratio:4/3;object-fit:cover"/></figure>



<p>Inside, they used the Miyota 9015, which beats at four hertz, has hacking seconds, and is accurate and reliable. It is a nice upgrade compared to the usual entry level movements people expect, and it fits the whole spirit of the watch, which is emotional on the outside and practical on the inside.</p>



<p>Before we finished our conversation, Abdulaziz told me to share one last message with my readers, and he insisted on it. The calligraphy watch is now available for order!&nbsp;</p>



<p>Anyone who wants one can contact Arnaud directly, either on the <a href="https://artisanwatch.be/?srsltid=AfmBOooEWzPa3qBwW6EDsPE08WhaAIXvpQjTsXIHO9Gt9XiaZuXxR-SU" data-type="link" data-id="https://artisanwatch.be/?srsltid=AfmBOooEWzPa3qBwW6EDsPE08WhaAIXvpQjTsXIHO9Gt9XiaZuXxR-SU">website</a> or through the brand’s Instagram. It is not a mass piece, it is simply the continuation of the creative relationship I have been lucky enough to witness up close.</p>



<p>And that is honestly what I enjoy most about writing these stories. The watches are beautiful, of course, but it is always the people and the emotions behind them that stay with me the longest.</p>



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		<title>Wearing Memory: Two Pièces Uniques by Dr. Abdulaziz Al Khanji and L&#8217;Artisan.</title>
		<link>https://timetellingmagazine.com/wearing-memory-two-pieces-uniques-by-dr-abdulaziz-al-khanji-and-lartisan/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Mr. Walid Benla]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 21 Nov 2025 13:24:01 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[By definition, a Pièce Unique or Unique piece is a “Watch produced in a single example, usually created on commission or for special events.”So when Dr. Abdulaziz first sent me a photo of his Pièce Unique in his hand: A warm, amber dial with four horses frozen mid-stride, I felt the same thing I get &#8230; <p class="link-more"><a href="https://timetellingmagazine.com/wearing-memory-two-pieces-uniques-by-dr-abdulaziz-al-khanji-and-lartisan/" class="more-link">Read more<span class="screen-reader-text"> "Wearing Memory: Two Pièces Uniques by Dr. Abdulaziz Al Khanji and L&#8217;Artisan."</span></a></p>]]></description>
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<p>By definition, a Pièce Unique or Unique piece is a “Watch produced in a single example, usually created on commission or for special events.”<br>So when <a href="https://www.instagram.com/abdulaziz.alkhanji/" data-type="link" data-id="https://www.instagram.com/abdulaziz.alkhanji/">Dr. Abdulaziz</a> first sent me a photo of his Pièce Unique in his hand: A warm, amber dial with four horses frozen mid-stride, I felt the same thing I get when a good story starts to rearrange itself in my head.<br>I know enough about watchmaking to recognise a thoughtful execution: 38mm, 9mm thick, domed sapphire, an NH35 automatic inside, the sort of compact, honest package that lets a dial do the talking. But I didn’t yet know the whole story behind the art on that face, or how that art had grown from friendship into a little business of feeling and craft.</p>



<p><a href="https://artisanwatch.be/" data-type="link" data-id="https://artisanwatch.be/">Arnaud, the maker behind L’Artisan d’Horlogerie</a>, is precisely the kind of person who makes that possible. His Instagram and site show what he’s been quietly obsessed with for years: stone and fossil dials, tiny landscapes, and textures cut from geological time. You’ll see dinosaur-bone slices, lapis, tiger eye, and other unusual materials rendered into round micro-portraits for the wrist. It’s all there in his online presence: process reels, close-ups of banded stone, and the occasional prototype coming to life.</p>



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<p>That’s the practical side. The thing that actually hooked Abdulaziz, and kept me listening to their story, was the personal. When they spoke about the two watches they made together, they weren’t riffing on lume or bevel angles. They were talking about family, memory, and a visual language that tied someone to a place. One of the two dials is this horse tableau on an amber field, warm, primitive, and somehow ceremonial. The other is a cooler, vivid composition: a blue field with three horses in the foreground, a building in the background, and a cluster of palm-like forms that read like memory and geography layered in paint.</p>



<p>Arnaud made both dials by hand, starting from sketches and material hunts. The materials matter: <a href="https://artisanwatch.be/" data-type="link" data-id="https://artisanwatch.be/">Arnaud’s work </a>has always been about finding unusual raw things and coaxing them into wearable art, dinosaur bone, and tiger-iron pieces that are fragile, wasteful to cut, and breathtaking when they survive the process. The result is always a one-off or a tiny run. That’s the point: they’re intimate, uneven, and irreplaceable. You can see this aesthetic across his feeds and shop; the stone dials are the signature.</p>



<p>Abdulaziz’s two watches are a study in contrast and complement. The amber-hued dial reads like an heirloom: ochres and rusts arranged into silhouettes of four horses that could be carved out of a textile or painted on a fresco. It sits inside a compact, conservative case, 38mm across, 9mm thin, topped with a domed sapphire crystal, which keeps the drama on the face where it belongs. The movement is the NH35, a practical, reliable automatic chosen because the case couldn’t accommodate Arnaud’s newer, slimmer micro-rotor ideas; it keeps the piece honest and wearable, a little utilitarian so that the dial’s voice is never competing with technical showmanship.</p>



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<p>The second dial is story-driven in a way that the first one only hints at. Here, there are three horses again, but their colours are saturated: a red, a blue, and a golden figure, placed in front of an architectural element and a palm or floral motif that reads like a cultural emblem. In their conversations, Abdulaziz explained how the four horses motif, which appears in other parts of the project’s design universe, ties back to family roles and cultural identity: four siblings, different personalities, a shared set of values; the national museum and the desert; a grandfather’s shop and a father’s memory. These are visuals that mean something, not just pretty pictures. They’re personal heraldry translated into tiny, circular paintings on stone. Those ideas are in the audio: the dials are cultural maps, and the watches are the vehicles carrying them. (You can see photos that Abdulaziz shared; his images make clear there are two distinct designs, each treated with care and storytelling intent.)</p>



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<p>What I find compelling is how the technical choices bow to that storytelling. Arnaud could have chosen to over-engineer: exotic movements, showy cases, impossible finishing. Instead, he deliberately used a modest case profile and a dependable NH35 movement for Abdulaziz’s piece, leaving the dial to become the centre of attention. That decision, simplicity in service of meaning, says as much about the maker as the imagery itself. <a href="https://artisanwatch.be/" data-type="link" data-id="https://artisanwatch.be/">Arnaud’s Instagram and site </a>show this pattern: craft that elevates unusual materials without overcomplicating the watch’s practicality.</p>



<p>There is another layer: how the friendship shaped the object. This began as friends riffing on ideas, not as a commission with a spec sheet. Abdulaziz didn’t walk in and demand a logo or a trend-driven hue; he brought memory, symbols and a trust that allowed Arnaud to interpret. In the studio the conversations became sketches, then scaled maquettes, then dial slices cut and polished until the images held the weight of the story. Arnaud told me about the losses in the cutting process (especially with fossils and delicate stones) and the way each success felt like a small miracle. He’s an obsessive with a craftsman’s patience, the kind of guy who will cut three different rough stones just to find the one that carries the exact red or banding he wants.</p>



<p>And there was beauty in their process: Abdulaziz’s cultural references, the museum’s architecture, the family horses, the desert colours, found a gentle interpreter in Arnaud’s hands. The watches became portraits of a friendship that had already started to move into business, a slow pivot from collectors’ chat to a real, collaborative practice. That transition felt natural because both men value the same rare thing: honesty. They were not trying to make a marketable halo piece. They were trying to make something honest for both of them.</p>



<p>There’s a practical lesson here, too: independent watchmaking is not only about inventing a movement or photogenic numerals. It’s about translating life into objects. One of the watches uses a humble, robust NH35 inside a compact 9mm-thick case with a domed sapphire, choices that ensure daily wear without compromising the soul of the design. The other dial speaks through imagery and colour, architecture, horses, personal iconography, and the watch becomes a conversation starter rather than a billboard.</p>



<p>If you look at Arnaud’s social footprint, you’ll see how this work fits a broader practice. L’Artisan is already known for stone dials and tiny series that sing because they are rare and tactile. The pieces for Abdulaziz sit comfortably in that lineage: singular, narrative-driven, slightly eccentric in the best way.</p>



<p>I’ve always thought the best collaborations are friendships that have learned to work together. This one feels that way: a collector and a maker who learned each other’s languages, who let small practicalities (case size, movement choice) bend to a larger aesthetic conversation, and who let cultural memory sit at the centre of the watch. When Abdulaziz wears the amber dial, you see something more than a timekeeper on his wrist; you see a small, wearable archive of family, time, and place. When he shows the blue, populated dial in its box, it reads as a miniature mural, a story paused in a second.</p>



<p>In a world that applauds shouty limited editions and technical flexes, making yours represents another type of horological superiority. They’re the sort of pieces that age in meaning, not just in patina. They are the product of a friendship that grew into a practice, and when the maker posts the cutting process on Instagram, or when Abdulaziz shares a wrist shot in a white thobe, you feel the lineage: two people making time into something that actually says something.</p>



<p>If you want to see the work yourself, Arnaud’s posts are a living sketchbook: raw stones, rehearsal sketches, and slow reveals of dials that survived the cut. But here’s the thing I keep thinking about: you don’t need to scroll to understand why this matters.</p>



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