My Timeless Pieces
The dealer inspecting a vintage Rolex Submariner with a jeweler's loupe

About

A private dealer. Not a warehouse.

I started buying and selling watches out of a notebook in 2014. The notebook is now a database, the apartment is now a Brickell office, and the clientele is mostly people I've met twice. Everything else is the same.

I work with collectors across Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach. I do not run an Instagram comment section. I do not have a 1,400-item catalog. I have what I have, and I'll tell you about it.

"I'll spend an hour photographing a single case back. I won't spend ten seconds writing copy I don't believe."

What I will not do.

  • Sell a watch with hairlines I haven't photographed.
  • Quote a price on a 5711 by email. Call me.
  • Ship internationally. USA only.
  • Pretend a fashion-brand chronograph is collectible.

The room

Where the watches live.

Brickell boutique desk with three watches under a brass banker's lamp
Macro view of a Patek Philippe movement with gold rotor
Gold Rolex Day-Date worn with a French-cuff shirt in Miami golden hour
Sealing a FedEx box with an insurance declaration alongside

The handoff

Prepaid. Insured. Signed for.

Every inbound piece ships on my FedEx account, insured to declared value, with a signature requirement on delivery. The box is opened on camera, the watch is photographed before it leaves the tray, and payment is wired within 24 hours of inspection. That is the entire process.

Clients, briefly.

He found me a 16610 with the original double-punched papers. I'd looked for two years.
D.R., Coral Gables
Wired payment 18 hours after FedEx scanned the box. That's it. That's the whole experience.
M.S., Boca Raton

Book an appointment

The room is quiet.

CallStart Appraisal