Linde Werdelin - Watches
Luxury sports Watches : skiing watch and diving Watch for men & Women
Linde Werdelin is a high-end watch & instrument brand founded by two Danes, Jorn Werdelin and Morten Linde. The 'Watch + Instrument' concept, whereby a luxury sports watch that can be worn with an attachable ski instrument or dive instrument, would take 5 years in R&D to perfect before it went to market in 2006. Linde Werdelin is the only luxury watch company producing top-of-the-range highly sophiscated digital instruments for .
LINDE WERDELIN was born out of a life-threatening event in the Swiss Alps, a 35 year friendship and an uncompromising drive for genuine usefulness and style.
In the winter of 1996, Jorn Werdelin, a keen mountaineer and off-piste skier, was taken by surprise by a bout of bad weather, got lost, skied off a cliff and broke his back.
In 2002, Jorn Werdelin and Morten Linde partnered to develop a new concept: a luxury sports watch on which a professional digital instrument clips on to provide the right level of information at the right time. For Morten, "analogue is the best way to read time; digital is how you assimilate technical details".
Linde Werdelin is a high-end watch & instrument brand founded by two Danes, Jorn Werdelin and Morten Linde. The 'Watch + Instrument' concept, whereby a luxury sports watch that can be worn with an attachable ski instrument or dive instrument, would take 5 years in R&D to perfect before it went to market in 2006. Linde Werdelin is the only luxury watch company producing top-of-the-range highly sophiscated digital instruments for .
LINDE WERDELIN was born out of a life-threatening event in the Swiss Alps, a 35 year friendship and an uncompromising drive for genuine usefulness and style.
In the winter of 1996, Jorn Werdelin, a keen mountaineer and off-piste skier, was taken by surprise by a bout of bad weather, got lost, skied off a cliff and broke his back.
In 2002, Jorn Werdelin and Morten Linde partnered to develop a new concept: a luxury sports watch on which a professional digital instrument clips on to provide the right level of information at the right time. For Morten, "analogue is the best way to read time; digital is how you assimilate technical details".