El-Cezeri II
Engine of Wonder
A tribute to imagination disciplined by engineering precision.
$175,000
In tribute to Al-Jazari, whose birth is traditionally dated to 1136 CE, approximately 890 years ago. A mechanical object for collectors who see invention as elegance, system as poetry, and motion as visible thought.
Short Manifesto
Master of Mechanisms pays tribute to intelligence made tangible. Inspired by the spirit of Al-Jazari, this piece celebrates the beauty of engineered systems — where motion is not merely functional, but graceful. In tribute to Al-Jazari, whose birth is traditionally dated to 1136 CE, approximately 890 years ago. For the collector, it represents invention as artistry and mechanics as visible thought.
Technical Specifications
Heroic Narrative
Master of Mechanisms pays tribute to intelligence made tangible. Inspired by the spirit of Al-Jazari, this piece celebrates the beauty of engineered systems — where motion is not merely functional, but graceful. In tribute to Al-Jazari, whose birth is traditionally dated to 1136 CE, approximately 890 years ago. For the collector, it represents invention as artistry and mechanics as visible thought.
Artistic Details
In tribute to Al-Jazari, whose birth is traditionally dated to 1136 CE, approximately 890 years ago.
Brass-gold layering, lucid skeleton depth, and diagram-like restraint make invention feel aristocratic rather than industrial.
The calibre is presented as visible reasoning: balanced, readable, and theatrically calm under inspection.
Each Maison Vaelric creation is individually documented and delivered with its certificate of authenticity, edition identification, archival registration profile, and private client support documentation. Acquisition begins with a private inquiry, followed by collector consultation, availability confirmation, and secure delivery coordination.
Caseback Experience
The exhibition caseback reveals bridge language, finishing logic, and the maison's narrative engravings. Decorative barrel treatments, balance architecture, and collector registration marks transform the rear side into a private chapter of the watch.
Movement Architecture
The manually wound calibre is presented as part engineering logic, part ceremonial object. Bridge layout, jewel placement, balance visibility, and negative space are composed to create a rhythm of inspection rather than brute exposure.
Inspect the MovementRelated Pieces
El-Cezeri II
A tribute to imagination disciplined by engineering precision.
El-Cezeri III
A collector’s series devoted to the ceremonial cabinet, automata, and mechanical imagination associated with Al-Jazari.

Sultan II
A ceremonial mechanical timepiece inspired by the birth of authority and the disciplined presence of a new sovereign.