Engraved Silver Pocket Watch With Magnifying Glass
The silver pocket watch has a quartz movement. The front has a clear glass which when opened acts as a magnifier. The back of the watch can be engraved your own message.
This particular pocket watch with magnifying glass is round with a flat finish and makes an excellent engraved gift idea for those with deteriorating eyesight, curious people and gift ideas for men (and women!) on all occasions including graduation, birthdays, weddings (as thank you gifts for the Best Man, Groom, Father of the Bride or Father of the Groom, perhaps.) It also makes for wonderful leaving gifts and retirements too. You could also give it for Father’s Day or any other special event during the year.
Once engraved, the personalised watch gift comes with a ‘chain’ style chain with pocket hook and it will be presented in a card presentation box to make the gift easy to wrap or to present.
Personalisation:
Your engraved message can be engraved on the back and may be up to 72 characters over 4 lines (18 characters per line including spaces.). Your message will be engraved in our standard font but you may choose another font from the drop down if you prefer.
-Why not purchase a greetings card for a little extra in the personalisation fields to complete the pocket watch gift? It will be a bespoke A5 sized card, folded in half and printed with your message on one of the inner sides (please leave message section blank if you would like to complete this yourself). A white envelope will also be sent.
You could also include a holographic gift bag for your engraved pocket watch gift in silver, red gold or purple. If you require this option then just choose the colour you prefer in the dropdown box provided.
Made from:
Silver plated with a quartz movement, comes in a gift box.
Watch ‘glass’ is PMMA Acrylic
Dimensions:
Approximately: width 4.5cm diameter x 11 cm long when opened x 1.2cm thick when the lid is closed. Chain length approximately 32cm including hook.
Sadia Munir –
Excellent Product & Service