Sun, Jul 13, 2025 | Muharram 19, 1447 | Fajr 04:09 | DXB 39°C
The Big Bang Unico Magic Ceramic pushes the limits of material science by blending multiple ceramic pigments into a single, seamless design
Hublot has never been one to play it safe. It’s a brand that thrives on the unexpected – fusing materials that shouldn’t work together, breaking design norms, and turning watchmaking into a statement of creative defiance. From the very first Classic Fusion in 1980, which paired gold with rubber – a combination that shocked the industry – the brand has been pushing the boundaries of material science. And with the new Big Bang Unico Magic Ceramic, Hublot is taking this to the next level. More than just a technical feat, the new watch is a fascinating leap into uncharted territory.
Coloured ceramic is already a tricky business. The extreme heat of the sintering process tends to drain the life out of pigments, leaving colours dull or uneven. Yet, Hublot has managed to craft ceramic cases and components in some of the brightest hues imaginable. Even so, multicoloured ceramic remained a pipe dream – until the brand’s R&D and Materials & Metallurgy teams, known internally as the “alchemists of time”, decided otherwise. After more than four years of experimenting, tweaking, and likely a few dead ends, they cracked the code. The result is a patent-pending process that blends multiple ceramic pigments into a single, seamless material – without losing any of the colour’s depth or clarity.
The Big Bang Unico Magic Ceramic is the result of that quiet obsession. Its 42mm dark grey ceramic case sets the stage for a bezel that feels alive with energy – blue circles that seem to pulse and shift as the light catches them. But here’s the thing: those patterns aren’t just painted on or chemically treated. They’re baked into the very structure of the ceramic. If you sliced the bezel in half, the blue would still be there, running all the way through. It’s a level of material mastery that few, if any, brands have ever achieved.
There’s a hypnotic quality to the design. The blue circles, surrounded by soft halos, create a sense of movement – like ripples in water or light breaking through fog. It’s not random, though. Hublot has choreographed every detail to strike a perfect balance between order and chaos. It’s contemporary art, distilled into a timepiece.
Underneath all this visual drama is the Unico automatic flyback chronograph movement – Hublot’s own creation, developed and manufactured entirely in-house. The flyback function allows you to reset the chronograph without stopping it – clean, quick, and effortless. The movement is finished in dark grey tones to complement the ceramic, while the openworked dial gives you a front-row seat to the mechanics in motion. A full black lined rubber strap ties it all together, keeping the vibe sharp and modern.
Other brands have flirted with multicoloured ceramic. Some are in the prototype stage, and some others have two-tone ceramic bezels that rely on surface treatments. But Hublot has gone deeper – literally. The patterns and colours in the Magic Ceramic are part of the material itself, not just a surface effect.
Only 20 watch aficionados will have the privilege of wearing the Big Bang Unico Magic Ceramic – a watch that proves yet again that Hublot refuses to follow trends or settle for technical half-measures. With this daring creation, Hublot hasn’t just pushed the boundaries of ceramic watchmaking – it’s rewritten the rulebook, adding a touch of magic to the future of haute horology.