The Piercing Saw
"To saw" is to insist until patience is broken.
The jeweller's hacksaw, which the watchmaker uses only occasionally, is a tool of fracture.
It separates abruptly, cutting material irreparably. But when the thin blade, stretched on the bow, meddles on the bridge of a movement to leave no mark on the piece of a watch, just to leave a shadow of metal between the rubies, then the piercing saw is an act of poetry. It is true that a skeleton watch is a delicate metal poem where space and time unite in the transparency of the movement.
Material reproduced with the agreement and consent of Bergeon SA