Timex’s Gold T80 Gets the Fashion Treatment (And It Actually Works)

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The MM6 Maison Margiela x Timex T80 costs $240 for the gift set and brings back everything that made 1980s digital watches cool without any of the compromises that made them disposable.

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All-gold case. All-gold integrated bracelet. All-gold pushers surrounding a digital display that looks like it time-traveled from 1984. This is Timex’s iconic T80 digital watch filtered through fashion house MM6 Maison Margiela’s minimalist aesthetic, and the result hits different than most fashion collaborations.

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The T80 gift set is the main event here: a wearable wristwatch plus matching bracelet for $240. There’s also a companion ring watch version for $195 that miniaturizes the design to wear on your finger, but that’s the novelty option, not the headline product.

What You’re Actually Getting

MM6 T80 Gift Set MM6 Ring Watch Standard T80
Price $240 $195 ~$50-80
What’s Included Wristwatch + bracelet Ring watch only Watch only
Full Functions Yes (chronograph, alarm, timer) Time display only Yes
Case Size 34mm 20mm (finger-sized) 34mm
Colorway All-gold MM6 edition All-gold MM6 edition Multiple options
Best For Daily wear, fashion statement Conversation starter, gym Budget digital watch

What Makes This One Different

Fashion brand collaborations with watch companies usually go one of two ways. Either the fashion brand slaps their logo on an existing watch and charges triple, or they redesign everything and break the functionality. MM6 and Timex went neither direction.




The 34mm case size stays true to the original T80 from 1979. The integrated bracelet maintains that vintage expansion band look. The four pushers flanking the display control the same functions: chronograph, daily alarm, timer, month and date display, and Indiglo backlight. The quartz digital movement is reliable Timex tech that’s been working for decades.

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What changed is the all-gold colorway and the MM6 detail below the display. That detail shows digits 0 through 23 with the number 6 circled, a reference to MM6’s numerical signature. Subtle branding that doesn’t compromise the vintage aesthetic.

Water resistance hits 30 meters, which makes this practical for daily wear. You can wash your hands, get caught in rain, handle regular life without babying it. It’s not a dive watch, but it’s not precious either.




The Gift Set Value

The $240 gift set includes two pieces: the T80 watch and a standalone bracelet inspired by the integrated band. That bracelet has no watch functionality. It’s just jewelry that matches the watch aesthetic.

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You’re paying $240 for a fashion collaboration digital watch and matching bracelet. Compare that to other fashion-tech partnerships. Apple Watch Hermes starts at $1,249. G-Shock collaborations with streetwear brands regularly hit $300-400 for a single piece.

The value proposition here is straightforward. You’re getting proven Timex reliability in a limited edition colorway that actually looks considered, not like a corporate licensing deal.




The Weird Ring Watch Option

Here’s where this collaboration gets interesting. Alongside the standard wristwatch, Timex is also selling a completely separate ring watch for $195.

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Same all-gold colorway. Same MM6 branding. But miniaturized to wear on your finger instead of your wrist. It has a digital time display and the signature graphic, but none of the chronograph or alarm functions. The expansion band adjusts to fit finger sizes in two ranges: S/M and M/L.

This is where the collaboration goes from “nice retro reissue” to “conversation starter EDC.” A gold ring with a working digital display solves problems that wrist watches can’t. Gym workouts with wrist wraps. Rock climbing where watch faces catch on holds. Medical or kitchen work where wrist jewelry creates hygiene issues.




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The ring watch costs $195 separately, so you’re not forced to buy both pieces. But it’s the most distinctive part of this collaboration, even if it’s not the headline product.

The T80’s Comeback Tour

The T80 launched in 1979 and became a cult classic through the 1980s before fading into obscurity. Timex brought it back in recent years as part of their retro reissue strategy, and it’s become one of their most successful collaboration platforms. This year alone saw Pan Am-themed chronographs for aviation fans and a Worn & Wound field watch edition for vintage enthusiasts. Each collaboration keeps the core T80 design intact while adding partner branding that feels considered, not corporate. The MM6 version is the most fashion-forward yet, trading Timex’s usual sports or heritage angle for minimalist high fashion.

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Affordable watch brands are succeeding in the space between throwback aesthetics and modern reliability. Luxury brands chase complications and precious metals. Smartwatch companies pile on sensors and subscriptions and charging requirements. Timex is just making interesting digital watches that work, cost under $300, and last years on a single battery.

The T80 movement dates back to 1979. The tech is proven. There’s no app to update, no Bluetooth pairing, no notification management. It tells time, sets alarms, runs a stopwatch. In 2025, that simplicity reads as luxury.

Who This Isn’t For

This collaboration makes zero sense if you want smart features. No heart rate tracking, no sleep monitoring, no smartphone notifications, no fitness stats. The T80 tells time and runs basic functions. That’s it.

It’s also not ideal if you want a large face for visibility. The 34mm case is vintage-sized, which reads small by modern standards. And if you’re hunting for ultra-affordable digital watches, the standard T80 costs $50-80. You’re paying extra for the MM6 collaboration and all-gold aesthetic. The fashion angle adds $160-190 to the base price.




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Where to Get It

The MM6 Maison Margiela x Timex T80 gift set (watch plus bracelet) is available now for $240 on Timex’s website. The ring watch version sells separately for $195 in S/M and M/L sizes.

Limited availability means this could sell out, especially given the fashion collaboration angle and the relatively accessible price point. The all-gold colorway won’t suit everyone’s style. This is not subtle jewelry. The 34mm case wears prominent. The integrated bracelet makes a statement.

But if you’re looking for proven digital watch functionality wrapped in vintage aesthetics that actually feel considered rather than corporate, this collaboration delivers. And at $240 for the set or $195 for the ring, it’s accessible enough to experiment with.

The weird ring watch format might be the headline grabber, but the standard wristwatch is the one you’ll actually wear every day. Both solve the same problem: giving you reliable time-telling without turning your wrist into a notification center.



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