Pricing details are still to come, but a similar platinum variant with an ice-blue dial honoring the 50th anniversary fetches a whopping $77,000 at retail, and is worth $121,000 on the secondary market.
The other, known as the Rolesor, is a combination of gold and steel. This one is made from a combination of Rolex's proprietary Oystersteel alloy, and yellow gold.
Powered by the new Calibre 9002 movement, the timepiece features an annual calendar that differentiates between 30- and 31-day months.
Local time is displayed via the conventional hands while a smaller, off-center disk displays a reference time in a 24-hour format.
Another variant of the Rolex Day-Date 36 features a colorful face inspired by a jigsaw puzzle. Each color puzzle piece represents a different "key moment" of life according to Rolex.
When the watch strikes 12 o'clock, an arc-shaped label at the top of the face displays an inspirational word – be it Happy, Eternity, Gratitude, Peace, Faith, Love, or Hope.
This year's Oyster Perpetual features a brand new motif called "Celebration" featuring candy pink, yellow, coral red, green, and turquoise blue bubbles rimmed in black.
Rolex says the material’s high strength makes it particularly challenging to work with, and required new production techniques.
With demand for new Rolex watches still at a feverish high, years-long waiting lists mean you probably won't see one of these new designs available to buy in a store.
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