Marathon Watch

Marathon Watch The company that was to become Marathon Watch was founded in 1904 as Weinsturm Watch, later to be named Wein Brothers.
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In 1939 Morris Wein founded Marathon Watch in Montreal, supplying fine precision timepieces to retailers throughout North America. In 1941 Marathon began manufacturing timing instruments for the Allied Forces. Marathon’s tradition continues today with its fourth generation manufacturing fine quality innovative instruments measuring time, temperature and distance. Marathon’s manufacturing facilities include Switzerland, Canada, and the USA!

Some watches mark the time. Others mark a moment.Created to honour 250 years of American independence, the U.S. 250th Ed...
06/03/2026

Some watches mark the time. Others mark a moment.

Created to honour 250 years of American independence, the U.S. 250th Edition Navigator pairs a proven military design with details unique to this milestone anniversary.

Limited in number and built to be worn, it’s a watch that connects history not just to the past, but to the years ahead.

Father’s Day is almost here.From now through June 23 at 3 p.m. ET, enjoy 10% off nearly every watch in our collection.*P...
06/02/2026

Father’s Day is almost here.

From now through June 23 at 3 p.m. ET, enjoy 10% off nearly every watch in our collection.*

Plus, orders over $1,800 USD will receive a complimentary 36mm Arctic Edition General Purpose Officer’s watch featuring blue tritium tubes.

Whether you’re marking a milestone, starting a tradition, or finding the right watch for the man who taught you the value of time, now is the moment.

*Excludes the U.S. 250 Navigator.

06/01/2026

A new strap can make any watch feel brand new.

Our friend  reminding us that even a   watch can feel quietly considered.
05/30/2026

Our friend reminding us that even a watch can feel quietly considered.

05/29/2026

Cleared for takeoff.

Long before   became luxury objects, they were survival instruments. In the 1950s and 60s, military divers and early SCU...
05/28/2026

Long before became luxury objects, they were survival instruments. In the 1950s and 60s, military divers and early SCUBA pioneers needed watches that could survive pressure, darkness, cold, and the constant violence of saltwater operations. Timing mattered. So did legibility. So did trust.

The carries that lineage forward. Oversized for readability. tubes for constant illumination beneath the surface. A massive knurled bezel designed to grip with wet gloves. Even the stark white Arctic dial feels rooted in the world of professional diving equipment and decompression tables; pure utility, stripped of decoration.

This isn’t nostalgia dressed up as heritage. The Jumbo Day/Date exists because divers still need watches built the old way: over-engineered, instantly readable, and ready to disappear beneath the cuff of a drysuit.

Back in the 1930s, as   became true instruments, watchmakers needed hands that could hold more luminous material without...
05/27/2026

Back in the 1930s, as became true instruments, watchmakers needed hands that could hold more luminous material without sacrificing precision.

Syringe hands are broad enough to maximise surface area for visibility and sharp enough to read at a glance under stress. They quickly became the go-to for instrument-grade timepieces.

The carries that same DNA forward. At 46mm, everything about it is built to be seen, understood, and trusted without hesitation. Its oversized syringe hands are a big reason why the JSAR remains one of the most unmistakable, and iconic, watches in the lineup.

The   Chronograph Search and Rescue was built for people who work against the clock in places most watches wouldn’t surv...
05/26/2026

The Chronograph Search and Rescue was built for people who work against the clock in places most watches wouldn’t survive.

46mm of surgical steel. Tritium tubes for constant illumination. A chronograph designed to track elapsed time when seconds actually matter.

Big, overbuilt, and unapologetically purpose-driven. The kind of watch that makes perfect sense the moment conditions turn ugly.

What began years ago as a loose gathering of watch enthusiasts and divers has quietly evolved into one of the most disti...
05/23/2026

What began years ago as a loose gathering of watch enthusiasts and divers has quietly evolved into one of the most distinctive traditions orbiting the .

This year’s expedition brought together divers, military veterans, writers, firefighters, instructors, photographers, and gear obsessives for a weekend that became less about the treasure hunt that it began as, and more about rediscovering why people chase experiences like this in the first place.

Read the full story here: https://wornandwound.com/a-fistful-of-jade-windup-in-a-bay-2026-with-marathon-prometheus-design-werx/

Ask anyone who’s strapped the   to their wrist and they’ll tell you that it’s one of the most comfortable and reliable t...
05/22/2026

Ask anyone who’s strapped the to their wrist and they’ll tell you that it’s one of the most comfortable and reliable tool watches on the market.

At 41mm wide and only 11.5mm thick, the Navigator has presence without height, designed to slide under the cuff and hug the wrist.

It’s versatile design has become something of a canvas, supporting different configurations and designs over the decades, making it one of the few pieces in our arsenal that continuously being reimagined while remaining true to its utilitarian military provenance.

Address

8355 Jane Street
Vaughan, ON
L4K5Y3

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm

Telephone

+18008224329

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