Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Wearables
  3. Android
  4. Mobile
  5. News

Luxury watchmaker Movado unveils Movado Motion and Bold Motion smartwatches

Add as a preferred source on Google

Movado, a longtime watchmaker perhaps best known for its relatively affordable luxury watches, is following its Swiss brethren into the ferocious smartwatch ring. In a press release on Monday, the company announced the Movado Motion and Bold Motion, variants of its men’s and women’s watch lines decked with LEDs and sensors engineered by Hewlett Packard.

Why HP? The Movado Motion and Bold Motion are a part of the computer company’s ongoing initiative, dubbed Engineered by HP, to augment jewelry and clothing accessories with technology. This began in October of last year when the company recruited famed fashion icon Michael Bastian to design the MB Chronowing, a sporty men’s smartwatch. “We work with these brands, they bring us their vision, and we add the smarts to it,” HP’s PR director, Mike Hokey, told The Verge.

Recommended Videos

The partnership with Movado is HP’s second with a luxury brand, and one that might be described as aesthetically conservative. The Movado Motion and Bold Motion trade the big, bright display found on most smartwatches for analog watch hands, a light-illuminated, pulsating blue inner bezel, and tick marks that indicate incoming messages on a paired iOS or Android phone. Distinct light patterns and vibrations indicate the category of notification — a blinking watch face for a calendar appointment, for example, or an illuminated minute hand for a Facebook post. (The intensity and appearance of notifications can be customized in Movado’s companion smartwatch app.)

The aim, HP Manager of Wearables Sridhar Solur told The Verge, was to make a smartwatch that could “[continue] to work as a watch” without anybody noticing. The company seems to have achieved that much.

The minimalism carries throughout the smartwatches’ interiors — neither pack many sensors to speak of. The Movado Motion and Movado Bold can track sleep and steps thanks to embedded accelerometers, but lack a heart rate monitor and blood oxygen-measuring pulse oximeter. Also absent are a speaker, microphone, Wi-Fi, and cellular capabilities, but Movado says the stripped-down design helps the Motion and Bold to achieve great battery life. It’s tough to argue that point; the Motion lasts a remarkable two years on a charge, and the Bold a week.

Besides battery life and aesthetic simplicity, Movado’s touting alarm functions and chronological accuracy as the other big selling points of the Motion and Bold Motion. When connected with Movado’s smartphone app, you can set “sleep cycle alarms” that wake you up gradually with haptic feedback, and the watches periodically synchronize time and date with a central server.

The smartwatches aren’t exactly cheap, but the $695, 44mm, unisex, water-resistant Bold — available in black or stainless steel with a silicon wrist strap — is a lot cheaper than a few of the other luxury smartwatches we’ve seen. Even the $995 Movado Motion, which comes in a Museum Sport model for men and a smaller Bellina model for women, slots in at a few Benjamins below some common Apple Watch configurations.

Both go on sale at Movado.com today.

Kyle Wiggers
Kyle Wiggers is a writer, Web designer, and podcaster with an acute interest in all things tech. When not reviewing gadgets…
Samsung’s smart glasses leak shows why your next Galaxy wearable may live on your face
Galaxy Glasses may turn Samsung’s Watch, Ring, and phone into one face-worn ecosystem
Samsung Galaxy Glasses leak

While Samsung already has a bunch of wearables, its upcoming smart glasses might tighten the experience even further. A new leak from SammyGuru offers an early look at the Galaxy Glasses Manager app, the companion app Samsung is expected to use for its new smart glasses.

The leak does not reveal final pricing, battery life, launch date, or every hardware spec. Unlike your typical leak that just hints at a device, the companion app actually makes it sound more real.

Read more
Meta will now charge you for the best AI feature on its smart glasses, and there’s a limit even if you pay
Meta is capping free Conversation Focus use to 3 hours per month, while Meta One Premium raises that to 15.
A person wearing the Ray-Ban Meta smartglasses.

Ray-Ban Meta glasses owners are getting less free use out of one of the glasses' AI features starting this month. Conversation Focus, which isolates and amplifies the voice of the person a wearer is talking to in loud settings, has been capped at three hours of use per month for anyone who doesn't pay for Meta One Premium. Meta confirmed the change on a support page this week, which also notes that a subscription is not required to use the AI glasses in general.

What the new usage tiers actually look like

Read more
OASIS Smart ring hides a trackpad and it lets you whisper-control your computer
OASIS 1 pairs private AI dictation with a tiny trackpad built into the ring itself
OASIS Smart ring Featured on hand

For decades, we've interacted with computers using keyboards, mice, and touchscreens. OASIS thinks it's time for something different. The startup has unveiled the OASIS 1, a smart ring designed for private AI dictation, letting users whisper naturally while a built-in microphone transcribes their words. And when the AI inevitably gets something wrong? There's a tiny trackpad built into the ring to fix it.

A microphone on your finger, a trackpad in the same ring

Read more