Reference:albino-daytona

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Daytona6263Albino

Albino Daytona (6263)

The Albino is a white-on-white dial fitted to the 6263: silver sub-dials on a white base, with "Rolex Oyster Cosmograph" at 12 and no Daytona line above 6. Three examples are documented. The best-known is Eric Clapton's, which moved from Christie's in 2003 at USD 50,190 to Sotheby's Abu Dhabi in 2025 at USD 952,500. The watch sits at the center of the sharpest authenticity fight in manual-wind Daytona collecting, and that fight is still unresolved.

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Albino Rolex Cosmograph Daytona 6263, case 2648447, Sotheby's Abu Dhabi Lot 340, sold USD 952,500 on 5 December 2025

What the Albino is

The Albino has four practical tells.

  • White main dial with silver sub-dials.
  • No Daytona line above 6 o'clock.
  • Printed hour markers rather than applied block markers.
  • Pale dial-and-bezel combinations on the known watches.

The three documented examples

Three Albino 6263 examples are publicly documented in the English-language auction record.

Eric Clapton's Albino

The most-traded and best-documented example. Clapton's watch has surfaced at four public sales over twenty-two years:

Sale Date Price (USD) Notes
Christie's New York June 2003 50,190 First public sale. Sold out of Clapton's collection into private hands.
Sotheby's 2008 ~505,000 Second public sale. About ten-fold appreciation over five years.
Phillips, Geneva May 2015 1,325,000 CHF (~USD 1.42M) Third public sale. The 2015 result triggered the first editorial dispute coverage in Hodinkee's contemporaneous reporting.
Sotheby's Abu Dhabi 5 December 2025 952,500 Fourth public sale. Lot 340. Drop from the 2015 ceiling reflects the forensic questions Perezcope raised in December 2025 — two days before the Sotheby's sale.

The second and third examples

Two further Albino examples are noted in the literature, usually tied to John Goldberger. Both are less publicly documented than the Clapton watch.

The three-way authenticity dispute

The Albino is the disputed dial in the manual-wind Daytona category. Three positions exist in the published literature, each held by a credentialed source, each unresolved:

Hodinkee (Clymer, 2013) — factory Rolex variant

Hodinkee's 2013 position was simple: the Albino was a rare factory Rolex dial, probably Singer-made, fitted to a very small number of 6263 cases. That reading held as the default for about twelve years.

Perezcope (December 2025) — Tom Bolt 1990s construction

Perezcope's December 2025 dossier argues the Albino is not a factory dial at all, but a late-1990s Tom Bolt construction built from a recovered 6238 silver dial transplanted into a 6263 case. In that reading, 6238 hands had to be used because standard 6263 hands did not fit the recessed sub-dials correctly.

Perezcope also states that Bolt disclosed his role directly to Sotheby's before the sale. Sotheby's still chose the softer catalogue line: origins unknown.

The Perezcope dossier carries specific forensic markers on Sotheby's Lot 340 (case 2648447):

- Discontinued thin-tapered sub-dial hands inconsistent with a 1971 production case - A high-sitting 30-minute sub-dial hand, mismatched to period-correct fitment - Plating coming off the screw-down pushers in a pattern that reads as aged fake material rather than original Rolex gold-plated - The 6238 donor-dial typography visible under magnification

Sotheby's Abu Dhabi (December 2025) — "origins unknown"

Sotheby's Abu Dhabi sold the third Albino example in December 2025 for USD 952,500. Even after Perezcope's dossier and Bolt's direct disclosure, Sotheby's kept the softer line: origins unknown. That left the watch in the market as a documented variant without taking a side on factory production versus later construction.

Why the dispute matters

Three positions stay on the record: factory variant, late construction, or unresolved origins. The literature does not close the argument, and the market keeps trading the watch anyway. Each future sale is really a vote on which reading buyers are willing to live with.

Relation to other dial variants

The Albino is adjacent to but distinct from several other Daytona dial categories.

The Albino is easiest defined by exclusion. It is not a Paul Newman dial, not a tropical dial, and not a standard 6263 dial. The documented watches still use period-correct 6263 cases and cal. 727 movements, so the dispute is about the dial, not the host watch.

Host reference

The Albino is documented exclusively on the 6263 case. No Albino-pattern dials have surfaced on the 6265 (metal-bezel sibling) or any other manual-wind Daytona reference. Every documented Albino carries the acrylic black bezel insert that defines the 6263.

Where to go next

- Reference 6263 — host reference - Paul Newman Daytona — adjacent exotic-dial category - Daytona glossary — quick definitions - Reference 6238 — the alleged donor-dial reference

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