Citizen Automatic Watches has been making timepieces that seem to fit and make lives better for people around the world for nearly 100 years.
While the organization still needs to make a bracelet big enough to fit in the center of a man, that hasn’t stopped Citizen Automatic Watches from “being close to the hearts of people around the world”.
The native unique name, the Shokosha Watch Research Institute, was built in 1918. From that point on, the organization has changed over time, producing not only fine men’s and women’s watches, but also diving watches, eco-drive watches and atomic clocks.
This development of the watch has made Citizen the greatest watchmaker in the world, a title that the organization has held for 24 years, according to the US office. Citizen Automatic Watches are not only characterized by the enormous size of the entire watch, but also by the imagination and development of the manufacturer.
As stated by the organization, Citizen Automatic Watches were responsible for the world’s thinnest LCD watch and the first speech recognition watch. Citizen clocks also gave the world a glimpse of the first electrically powered jump timer when the organization unveiled it.
Local clocks were also at the fore of vitality and green innovation. The organization is perhaps best known for its Eco-Drive collection of Citizen men’s and Citizen women’s watches that never need a drain battery to keep the watch moving forward.
“Energy through light,” as the saying goes, makes the current rechargeable load cell in the watch less deniable and more usable. An almost invisible solar panel, which is inserted into the clock under the dial, is where the clock captures the light and is controlled from there.