Editorial
The Villeret Grande Date (ref. 6669-1127-55B) puts Blancpain's double-disc grande date display in a 40mm white-gold case with the subdued, high-arched case profile the Villeret line has carried since the 1980s revival. The complication is honest: two independent discs for tens and units digits give the date maximum legibility without any of the optical tricks that make single-disc grande date modules look cluttered or small. This is a dress watch that earns its complication rather than wearing it for decoration.
Blancpain revived the Villeret family in the 1980s under Jacques Piguet's movement architecture, positioning it as the haute-horlogerie counterpart to the Fifty Fathoms line. The grande date complication in the Villeret family uses two separate discs rather than a sectored single-disc arrangement: one disc for tens digits, one for units, each driven independently through the date mechanism. The 6669 reference entered the catalog around 2017 in white gold with the caliber 6639, a self-winding movement with an in-house grande date module.
The 40mm case is larger than the earlier Villeret references from the 1980s-2000s revival, sitting closer to contemporary wrist preferences while retaining the distinctive high-arched lugs and double stepped bezel that identify the Villeret at a distance. Production is ongoing as of 2025.
The grande date window is a large aperture and the dial around it is correspondingly clean: any refinishing or moisture intrusion is immediately visible under magnification, check the disc edges and aperture frame for uniformity. White-gold Villeret cases are finished with an alternating polish and brushing that Blancpain applies by hand; look for flat spots on the lug chamfers and softened bezel edges on examples that have been polished by non-authorized watchmakers. The caliber 6639's grande date mechanism is proprietary and relies on correctly timed disc jumps at midnight; a disc that advances sluggishly or partially is a warning sign for a movement that needs service.
Confirm papers and extract: this is a white-gold watch in a price bracket where the Blancpain archive extract is the only reliable provenance document. The Villeret's double-stepped bezel is a magnet for ding damage on the outer step; inspect under good light before buying.