OK, let's try again....
The first photo posted by you in this thread is, apparently, the Paul Gerber for PuristSPro 10th Anniversary Model 42 tri-rotor automatic wrist watch in its near-final, or final, iteration. The date disc colour matches the case colour; the numerals, indices and hands appear black, or very dark grey/blue/purple.
The second photo posted (i.e. the photo in your second post in this thread) is, apparently, an earlier prototype version of the watch. It has a black date disc and lime green/apple green numerals, indices and hands. This may be grossly unfair, but whilst in a literal sense that may indeed be a shot of those numerals, hands and indices as covered with paint of a Luminova/Superluminova type, it would seem to be a daylight shot of said 'lume' in its 'unactivated' state (where 'daylight' may be defined to include an interior shot with sufficient ambient natural or artificial light to permit an image to be captured without 'activation' of lume). This may be deduced from the clear background detail and sharp dial detail, obtained (apparently) at no cost to the resolution of the image due to low light or long exposure; indeed, from the capture of the shadow of the second hand upon the dial.
Whilst it is not impossible, therefore, respectfully it seems...improbable...that the second shot is a 'lume shot' in what has become the accepted sense of the term - a term of art, if not of science. That, of course, is no fault of yours: it would have been much fairer to have enquired of you (as is now done) whether you have or have access to a photograph which demonstrates how the Luminova/Superluminova - like material painted on to the black or very dark grey/blue/purple numerals, indices and hands of the final or near-final iteration of the Paul Gerber for PuristSPro 10th Anniversary Model 42 tri-rotor automatic wrist watch (i.e. the watch represented in the first photograph posted by you in this thread) appears to the eye in a dark ambient environment (for example [but not limited to] an unlit windowless room; a rural setting away from artificial light at midnight at the equator on a new moon) when 'charged' or 'activated' (as those near-interchangeable terms are generally understood) by prior exposure for some time to ultra-violet band radiation and, if so, whether you might be prepared to post that photograph here so that interested denizens of the forum might understand how (i.e. how apparently brightly, or faintly, and in what colour/s) the otherwise seemingly inert numerals, indices and hands of that watch might appear to incandesce in such circumstances?
At another forum we might have read that as 'gottalumeshotbud'?' Indeed: at another forum you probably wouldn't now be able to see this post...
Cheers,
pplater.