Two-tone — Rolex calls it Rolesor — is the elegant compromise: a stainless steel case and outer bracelet links combined with solid 18ct gold on the bezel, crown, fluted centre links and indices. Rolex registered the Rolesor name in 1933 and the configuration has defined the Datejust, Yacht-Master and Submariner Date ever since. Two-tone wears lighter than solid gold, costs roughly a third as much for the same model, and gives a very specific visual identity: the warm metal contrast against cold steel reads as confident rather than ostentatious. The Datejust 41 in Yellow Rolesor with the fluted bezel and Jubilee bracelet is the most popular configuration; the Submariner Date 126613LB in Yellow Rolesor with blue dial is the iconic two-tone sports watch. The 116621 Yacht-Master in Everose Rolesor was the first two-tone Rolex sports watch with rose gold and remains highly sought-after across both retail and the secondary market. Two-tone references hold value extremely well — the gold content underwrites a meaningful share of the resale price.
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