Omega Seamaster Olympic Games Collection. Omega has been the Official Timekeeper of the Olympic Games on 27 occasions since 1932. To celebrate this unique timekeeping legacy - one that reinforced the commitment of the brand to precision and innovation - Omega is introducing the “Seamaster Olympic Games Collection”. Each Omega Seamaster Olympic Games model has a retail price of Euro 5,100.
Omega has been the Official Timekeeper of the Olympic Games on 27 occasions since 1932. To celebrate this unique timekeeping legacy, which reinforced the commitment of the brand to precision and innovation, Omega is introducing the Seamaster Olympic Games Collection.
The famous five rings of the Olympic Games are represented by five models available in black, yellow, green, blue or red.
The design of the new watches has been inspired by various Omega stopwatches from the brand’s timekeeping past – particularly those used at the 1976 events in Montreal and Innsbruck.
This can be seen on the domed black and white dial of each watch, designed to be read at a glance, with sporty hands and bold hour markers on black, set in sharp contrast with an easily-readable minute track on a white outer circle.
To further enhance the watch’s athletic spirit, a coloured pulse reader encircling the dial, with three narrowly-separated 20 second timing intervals, enables the wearer to easily calculate their pulse beats-per-minute.
On the caseback, an anodized aluminium ring includes all known host cities and dates from Omega’s Olympic Games journey, from Los Angeles 1932 up to Los Angeles 2028.
The 39.5 mm stainless steel cases are matched to leather straps, which are micro-perforated both for style and to aerate the wearer’s skin. Inside, the watches are driven by the Master Chronometer-certified calibre 8800, a self-winding movement with Co-Axial escapement which resistant to magnetic fields reaching 15,000 gauss.
Only 2,032 versions of each model have been created, a reference to Omega’s role as Official Timekeeper, which extends right through till 2032, marking 100 years of Olympic Games timekeeping. The Limited Edition number is engraved on the side of the case. Each model of the Omega Seamaster Olympic Games Collection has a retail price of Euro 5,100. omegawatches.com
The design of the new watches has been inspired by various Omega stopwatches from the brand’s timekeeping past – particularly those used at the 1976 events in Montreal and Innsbruck.
This can be seen on the domed black and white dial of each watch, designed to be read at a glance, with sporty hands and bold hour markers on black, set in sharp contrast with an easily-readable minute track on a white outer circle.
On the caseback, an anodized aluminium ring includes all known host cities and dates from Omega’s Olympic Games journey, from Los Angeles 1932 up to Los Angeles 2028.
The 39.5 mm stainless steel cases are matched to leather straps, which are micro-perforated both for style and to aerate the wearer’s skin. Inside, the watches are driven by the Master Chronometer-certified calibre 8800, a self-winding movement with Co-Axial escapement which resistant to magnetic fields reaching 15,000 gauss.
Only 2,032 versions of each model have been created, a reference to Omega’s role as Official Timekeeper, which extends right through till 2032, marking 100 years of Olympic Games timekeeping. The Limited Edition number is engraved on the side of the case. Each model of the Omega Seamaster Olympic Games Collection has a retail price of Euro 5,100. omegawatches.com
Yellow for me!
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