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C4C Vintage Watches

Piaget / Protocole Pave Diamond dial Factory diamonds

Piaget / Protocole Pave Diamond dial Factory diamonds

Regular price ¥1,250,000 JPY
Regular price Sale price ¥1,250,000 JPY
Sale Sold out
Taxes included.
basic information
Item number PCV5U6
brand Piaget
Model Protocol
Year of manufacture 1970 (approximately)
condition

A product with visible and tactile scratches, scuffs, dents, and moderate signs of use.


March 12, 2025

In-house overhaul

Accessories etc. Original box included, no original papers
sex Men's Watches/Unisex
location Japan, Osaka
Shipping time In-stock items
Movement
Winding quartz
Caliber
Base Caliber
Number of jewel bearings
case
Case material WG
diameter

24 × 27mm

waterproof
Bezel Material WG

Glass Sapphire
dial Silver
Dial numbers
watch strap
Belt material leather
Belt color Brown
buckle pin buckle
Buckle Material stainless
special features
Date display
others

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Product Description
Wearing time — as light, as silence, as art.

From Piaget's legendary Protocol series comes an extraordinary piece:
a full pavé diamond dial that quietly redefines what a watch can be.
It doesn't shout. It doesn't sparkle to impress.
It glows — like frost in morning light, soft and serene.

What makes this watch so rare isn't just the diamonds.
It's the philosophy behind them.

There are no hour markers. No indices.
Piaget chose to remove every distraction — even time itself — to let the dial become a canvas of pure brilliance.
Time isn't measured here. It's suggested.
Felt through movement, shadow, and shimmer.

The case is signature Protocol — square, slim, stepped.
It echoes Art Deco with its clean geometry and quiet confidence.
But paired with a matte taupe Saffiano leather strap, the entire piece transforms:
Refined, yes — but also grounded, wearable, and unexpectedly modern.

We love this piece not just for what it is, but for how it wears.
Not with gowns or heels — but with vintage denim, white shirts, linen trousers.
With oversized coats, military jackets, or nothing but skin and confidence.
Let it be your contrast. Your contradiction.

Inside, a quartz movement keeps things effortless.
You don't wind poetry. You live with it.

This watch isn't about showing status.
It's about showing taste — the kind that doesn't beg for attention,
But always draws it.

Only Piaget could have created something like this —
a timepiece that doesn't tell time loudly,
But whispers timelessness.