HTH - Homage To Harrison
Where timekeeping honors its origins
HTH -
Homage To Harrison
Where timekeeping honors its origins
The HTH has always been an expression of Felipe Pikullik’s understanding of timekeeping.
Inspired by John Harrison, a true pioneer of horology, it stands as a quiet tribute to his legacy, not through imitation, but through a shared sense of clarity, structure, and purpose. Across generations, this idea continues to evolve, finding new depth through the FPA1 architecture while remaining rooted in the same principles.
What remains is the intention. A watch that does not seek attention, but carries its origin with quiet confidence, shaped by balance, proportion, and time itself.
HTH - First Generation
Where a tribute first took form, honoring Harrison and his H4 through clarity, balance, and timeless design.
HTH - Second Generation
Where this tribute continues, now shaped within our own architecture and carried forward with greater depth and intention.
John Harrison was a clockmaker who redefined the meaning of precision in timekeeping.
At a time when navigation at sea was uncertain and often dangerous, he devoted his life to solving the problem of longitude, the challenge of determining how far east or west a ship had traveled. While latitude could be measured through the sun or stars, longitude required precise timekeeping, where even the smallest deviation could lead to fatal errors.
While others relied on astronomical theory, Harrison followed a different path, guided by an intuitive understanding of mechanics and an unwavering commitment to accuracy.
His H4 timekeeper marked a turning point. For the first time, a watch was capable of maintaining precise time across long sea voyages, allowing sailors to determine their position with confidence and fundamentally changing navigation.
What defines his work is not only the achievement itself, but the way it was pursued. Harrison worked outside established systems, driven by clarity, purpose, and a relentless focus on what truly mattered.
His legacy continues to resonate today. Not as a distant moment in history, but as a way of thinking, where precision is not decoration, but intention, and where every detail exists for a reason.
John Harrison was a clockmaker who redefined the meaning of precision in timekeeping.
At a time when navigation at sea was uncertain and often dangerous, he devoted his life to solving the problem of longitude, the challenge of determining how far east or west a ship had traveled. While latitude could be measured through the sun or stars, longitude required precise timekeeping, where even the smallest deviation could lead to fatal errors.
While others relied on astronomical theory, Harrison followed a different path, guided by an intuitive understanding of mechanics and an unwavering commitment to accuracy.
His H4 timekeeper marked a turning point. For the first time, a watch was capable of maintaining precise time across long sea voyages, allowing sailors to determine their position with confidence and fundamentally changing navigation.
What defines his work is not only the achievement itself, but the way it was pursued. Harrison worked outside established systems, driven by clarity, purpose, and a relentless focus on what truly mattered.
His legacy continues to resonate today. Not as a distant moment in history, but as a way of thinking, where precision is not decoration, but intention, and where every detail exists for a reason.
About John Harrison

About John Harrison



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