
A. Lange & Sohne Richard Lange Jumping Seconds in white gold.
German watchmaker A. Lange & Söhne is revered for exclusivity, design, and the pinnacle of Saxon watchmaking. Rarely does the brand introduce new dial colors or case materials—but when it does, the results are striking. Such is the case with two new limited editions unveiled today: the Richard Lange Jumping Seconds in white gold with a pink-gold dial, and the 1815 Tourbillon in platinum with a jet-black enamel dial.
Both models are well-known to connoisseurs, but these new renditions underscore how subtle design changes can lend fresh personality to signature complications. While the technical specifications of each of the watches (sizes, movements, finishes, etc.) remain unchanged, the new combinations highlight the brand’s dedication to artistry as much as precision.

The new A. Lange & Sohne Richard Lange Jumping Seconds watch now boasts a rose gold colored dial.
Richard Lange Jumping Seconds
Launched nine years ago, the Richard Lange Jumping Seconds was designed to put the smallest unit of time—the second—at center stage. Its dial features three intersecting subdials, the largest of which displays the seconds, underscoring the watch’s focus on chronometric precision.
The new 2025 version pairs a 750 white-gold case with a pink-gold dial—a warm-meets-cool aesthetic that is further accented by crisp black numerals and a dark-brown alligator strap. Limited to just 100 pieces, it becomes the fourth edition of this technically sophisticated model.

Just 100 pieces of the A. Lange & Sohne Richard Lange Jumping Seconds in white gold with rose gold dial will be made.
Inside beats the hand-wound Caliber L094.1, composed of 390 parts and flawless finishing. The movement incorporates a constant-force escapement for steady energy delivery, a jumping seconds mechanism for precise one-second increments, and a Zero-reset function that allows for exact time setting. A sapphire caseback reveals hallmarks of Lange finishing, including the three-quarter German silver plate, hand-engraved balance cock, and screwed gold chatons.
1815 Tourbillon

A. Lange & Sohne 1815 Tourbillon in platinum.
The new 1815 Tourbillon, meanwhile, gains a dramatic new face. Housed in a 950 platinum case, the watch now features a grand-feu black enamel dial crafted entirely in-house—a process requiring more than 100 individual steps and weeks of work to complete. Limited to 50 pieces, this is the fifth variation of the 1815 Tourbillon and the twelfth Lange watch to showcase enamel artistry.
The complication itself is presented prominently through an aperture at 6 o’clock. The Caliber L102.1, hand-wound and comprising 262 parts, combines the traditional one-minute tourbillon with two key innovations: a stop-seconds mechanism that allows the balance to be halted, and a Zero-reset function. Together, these ensure not only chronometric excellence but also precise setting—rare in a tourbillon. The movement delivers a 72-hour power reserve and reveals artisanal details such as black-polished components and a diamond endstone mounted in a gold chaton at the heart of the tourbillon.

A. Lange & Sohne 1815 Tourbillon is crafted in platinum with black enamel dial.
With these two new editions, A. Lange & Söhne once again proves that even small changes like unexpected dial colors and metals can make a major impact.