Omega Womens 212 30 28 61 01 001 Seamaster Quartz

Omega Womens 212 30 28 61 01 001 Seamaster Quartz

Stainless steel case with a stainless steel link bracelet. Unidirectional black ion-plated bezel. Black dial with luminous hands and dots hour markers. Minute markers around the outer rim. Date displays at the 3 o’clock position. Quartz movement. Scratch immune anti- reflective sapphire crystal. Screw in crown. Case diameter: 28 mm. Case thickness: 10 mm. Deployment clasp. Water immune at 300 meters / 1000 feet. Omega James Bond Seamaster 300M Quartz Ladies Watch 212.30.28.61.01.001.

The Omega Story

The Omega watch story begins in 1848, when founder Louis Brandt begun hand assembling key-wound precision pocket watches from constituents supplied by local craftsmen in his principality La Chaux-de-Fonds, in the northwest corner of Switzerland. However, the Omega name didn’t appear until 1894, after Louis Brandt had passed away and his watchmaking traditions were taken over by his sons, Louis-Paul and Cesar Brandt. Omega watches have long been related with glamorous screen and sports stars–the Omega Seamaster is famous for being the watch of choice for James Bond–with current ambassadors including Pierce Brosnan, Nicole Kidman, tennis player Anna Kournikova, and swimmers Michael Phelps and Ian Thorpe.

But Omega is more than just a fashionable watch. In 1965, the Omega Speedmaster chronograph was “flight-qualified by NASA for all manned space missions” as the only wristwatch to have withstood all of the U.S. space agency’s severe tests, including passing grades for extreme shocks, vibrations, and temperatures ranging from -18 to +93 degrees Celsius. The greatest moment in the Speedmaster’s history was undoubtedly 20 July 1969 at 02:56 GMT, when it recorded man’s introductory steps on the Moon’s surface as share of the Apollo 11 mission. Omega watches rocketed off to space on some subsequent missions, including visits to Skylab and the historic Apollo-Soyuz link-up of Soviet and American astronauts in 1975.

In more recent years, Omega devised the world’s introductory self-winding wristwatch with central tourbillon in 1994 and made history in 1999 with the primary mass-produced watch incorporating the co-axial escapement, formulated in conjunction with widely known and esteemed English master watchmaker George Daniels. In simple terms, the escapement is the heart of a mechanical watch, generating the impulses that make the mechanism move. Omega’s Co-Axial Escapement drasti reduces the friction among the elements that transmit energy to the other components, formulating dandier stability and precision and reducing service requirements.

Today, Omega is known for it is stringent testing of new movements, cases, and bands. Each new Omega motion is tested on the wrist in existent Omega models, while respective laboratory tests are conducted to determine temperature-resistance, shock-resistance and vibration-resistance.

Omega Womens 212 30 28 61 01 001 Seamaster Quartz

Omega Womens 212 30 28 61 01 001 Seamaster Quartz Photo

Omega Womens 212 30 28 61 01 001 Seamaster Quartz

Omega Womens 212 30 28 61 01 001 Seamaster Quartz Picture

Omega Womens 212 30 28 61 01 001 Seamaster Quartz

Omega Womens 212 30 28 61 01 001 Seamaster Quartz Picture

Omega Womens 212 30 28 61 01 001 Seamaster Quartz

Omega Womens 212 30 28 61 01 001 Seamaster Quartz Picture


Most helpful client reviews

3 of 3 persons found the following review helpful.
5One Tough Watch!
By Tyrannis
I have wanted one of these watches for a long time. I confess, I partly just wanted a lavishness watch to prove I could do something sort of frivolous but highpriced for myself. I purchased it because I WANTED IT. I have to say, it is a gorgeous watch. It keeps fantastic time and yes, it is the kind of watch that makes people notice. However, what has actually impressed me is how tough this thing is. I am not distinctively hard on my things, but this watch is taking a beating and it looks closely new. The crystal is completely unharmed even though it’s been slammed into a steel door frame (hurt me a lot more than the watch) and I believe I backed over it with my car. I do not recognise what happened for certain, but I had dropped it when leaving for work, didn’t realize this and found it later. The clasp on the band is bent and unusable right now, but the crystal and the rest of the band are still clean. I don’t believe my stepping on it could have bent the clasp the way it is, it took more weight than I may utilize to do that! (I HOPE!) It is at the jewelers and hopefully may be repaired but if not, I will contact Omega to get a new piece. Watch bands I suppose to sporadically replace, particularly if I’m inadvertently abusing them as I am this one but for the crystal to still be unmarked is unbelievable after having been dropped onto concrete and at the very least stepped on but perchance driven over.
This watch has unquestionably proven it’s value to me. If I get into a position to want a new one, I will look at Omega before anything else.

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