Farer's Cushion Case is the company's most interesting silhouette, and the Marsden, a 35mm hand-wound in gloss white with blue markers, is the cleanest expression of it. At $1,165 it sits in the awkward middle of mechanical watches, too expensive to be casual, too small and too colourful to read as a serious collector piece. Which is sort of the point.
The Verdict
A properly made Swiss hand-wound in a 35mm cushion case, designed in Britain with the restraint to know when to stop. If you already own a Submariner clone and want something with a pulse instead of a logo, this is the watch.
The Make
The case is 316L stainless steel, 35mm wide, 10.5mm thick, 43.8mm lug-to-lug. Polished sides and lugs, a domed sapphire crystal with internal AR coating, and a sapphire exhibition back. The crown is rounded steel with a solid bronze cap embossed with Farer's "A", which is the kind of small, unnecessary choice that tells you the design team cared.
Inside is a Sellita SW210-1 b in Elaboré grade, hand-wound, roughly 45 hours of power reserve, finished with Top Grade decoration, a bespoke Farer bridge and blued screws. The SW210 is a workhorse, the Swiss equivalent of an ETA 7001 derivative; what matters here is the finishing, and through the caseback it looks the part. Made in Bienne by Roventa-Henex, which builds movements for a number of small Swiss brands you'd recognise if they were named.
Water resistance is limited. Treat it like a dress watch and service every four to five years. Farer covers the movement for 60 months, which is longer than most.
The Fit
35mm reads small on paper and correct on the wrist. The cushion case spreads visually wider than a round 35, so it wears closer to a 37 or 38. On a 7.25" wrist it sits cleanly with the lugs landing on the bone, not over it. The denim suede strap on the lead variant is soft out of the box but will need a keeper adjustment after a week of wear. Thin enough at 10.5mm to slide under any shirt cuff without catching.
The Context
At $1,165 the comparisons are obvious: Baltic, Christopher Ward's Twelve, the Oris Big Crown Pointer Date if you stretch. Baltic gets you closer to vintage but with rougher finishing. Christopher Ward gives you more watch for the money but less personality. Farer's wedge is colour and proportion, and the Marsden is the version of that wedge dialled almost all the way down. It's the Farer for someone who doesn't want a Farer that announces itself.
The Personal Note
I'm not a small-watch convert by default; I still think most men look better in a 38 to 40. But the cushion case changes the math. On a leather strap with a white shirt, the Marsden reads like something inherited rather than bought, which is the highest compliment a $1,165 watch can earn.



