Collaborations
Meshberg collaborates selectively with people and platforms that understand watches, craft, and independent storytelling.
The goal is not generic influencer noise. Good collaborations add context: how a dial is made, why a design matters, how a watch connects to culture, or how a small mechanical object can carry meaning beyond specs.
These connections sit inside the wider ecosystem around Meshberg, Rexx Timepieces, The Watcher HQ, and Rexx StudioWorks.
The Watcher HQ
The Watcher HQ is the ecosystem editorial platform for watch culture, guides, modding, buying advice, and independent watchmaking stories.
For Meshberg readers, it is the place to go deeper: mechanical watch basics, dial culture, microbrands, Seiko modding, custom builds, and workshop-connected articles.
It gives the watches broader context without turning Meshberg into a loud content brand.
Rexx Timepieces
Rexx Timepieces is the workshop-driven custom watch side of the ecosystem.
Rexx focuses on custom mechanical watches, Seiko mods, dial experiments, engraving, finishing, assembly, and practical workshop process.
Meshberg is quieter and more refined, but the hands-on experience behind Rexx helps inform the technical foundation behind many Meshberg ideas.
The Israel Store by Hananya Naftali
Meshberg has collaborated with The Israel Store, led by Hananya Naftali.
Those projects connect watch design with cultural storytelling while keeping the watch itself first: proportion, mechanical character, dial work, and wearability.
When a collaboration has a broader message, the goal is still to build a real mechanical watch that can stand on its own.
Rexx StudioWorks
Rexx StudioWorks is the small-batch craft and workshop-commerce layer of the ecosystem.
It focuses on handmade dials, engraved objects, laser work, coins, and experimental workshop products.
For Meshberg, it helps show the hands-on craft language behind independent dial ideas without confusing Meshberg with a general craft store.
Work With Meshberg
Meshberg is open to selective collaborations with watch reviewers, retailers, creators, and cultural partners when the project fits the brand.
The strongest ideas usually involve mechanical watches, distinctive dial work, small-batch production, or honest storytelling around independent watchmaking.
If you have a serious collaboration idea, contact Meshberg with the concept, audience, timeline, and what you want to build together.