H. Moser & Cie. has shrunk its Streamliner integrated-bracelet sport watch into two smaller cases. The Streamliner Two Hands 34mm and 28mm, launched at Watches and Wonders 2026, keep everything that defined the original piece from 2020, including the bracelet architecture, the cushion-curve case, the automatic movement, and the no-logo dial, in sizes that the brand's existing 40mm reference could not reach.
Both new cases are sized in the range collectors often describe as "unisex," but the smaller of the two is more narrowly a women's reference. The 34mm version wears a silver fumé dial with a frosted texture. The 28mm wears a burgundy fumé. Both watches hold water resistance to 120 metres, and both carry the same retail price of 21,900 Swiss francs, which Monochrome Watches reported from the press launch.
What Moser actually changed
The Streamliner has always been a restrained watch, with lume-filled hour and minute hands and nothing else. There are no indices. There is no brand name on the dial. There is no date. Moser's founder, Edouard Meylan, has been consistent about this for years: the brand prefers a quiet dial and a good movement. The new Two Hands references do not break that discipline. They just carry it into smaller cases that fit wrists the original Streamliner was never going to reach.
The movement is Moser's HMC 200 automatic. The cases are steel, polished and brushed in the same rhythm as the existing Streamliner, with the characteristic asymmetric lugs that flow into the bracelet. Fratello noted that the 28mm version wears slightly larger than its dimensions suggest, because the Streamliner's lug-to-lug proportions sit close to a square.

The case for the 34mm
Watch sizes have been drifting downward for the last three years across the luxury segment, and the 34 to 36mm range has become the zone where most brands are fighting for attention. Rolex, Tudor, Grand Seiko, and Vacheron Constantin have all put significant product energy into cases under 37mm since 2024. Moser's move is different in one respect: the Streamliner was always an integrated-bracelet design, and those are much harder to scale down than a classic three-lug round case. The result is a 34mm piece that keeps the Streamliner's presence on the wrist without turning into a jewellery watch.
The 28mm reference is the first time the Streamliner line has crossed into a case size that reads as explicitly feminine. Moser has framed this as a natural extension rather than a separate sub-brand, and both new references carry the same bracelet construction as the original 40mm piece.
Price and availability
At 21,900 Swiss francs, the Streamliner Two Hands sits below a standard Moser Perpetual Calendar but above the brand's Endeavour simple references. Wrist Enthusiast and Haute Time both noted that Moser is not planning a limited edition for either size, which is a shift from the brand's recent launches. Deliveries are expected through authorised retailers in the second half of 2026.
For collectors who have wanted the Streamliner's design vocabulary in a wrist-honest size, the 34mm is the interesting reference. The 28mm is less a smaller Streamliner and more a new entry in the small-case luxury segment, which is where a lot of the most competitive new watches of this fair have landed.
Sources: Monochrome Watches, Fratello, Haute Time, Wrist Enthusiast, H. Moser & Cie.


