. . . it's on my wrist for its long-overdue outing. You can tell it's on my wrist by the loose hair stuck between the lug and strap. What Omega is on your wrist today? ...
This was how the day startedβ¦ β¦but I certainly wasnβt about to end the day without an omega on the wrist. This one happened to be back from service, which I celebrated with a brand new water resistant leather strap from Molequin. Wishing you and myself ma...
. . . to work on my vintage Omegas, Hussam. And a well-stocked supply house as well. Interestingly enough, the chronometer just returned from service. The upper cap jewel was cracked, but fortunately my watchmaker had an original part in stock. It's now r...
. . . bearing the Tiffany & Co double-signature. Three were in sad shape, but one had an even better dial and its original crown. It wasn't for sale; if it had been, I'd have been sorely tempted. Art
. . . nor were they signed. Even sadder, the first watchmaker that worked on it ignored my instruction to leave the case alone. He polished it, removing all the original brushing. My goldsmith pal replaced some of the brushing, but not between the lugs. A...
. . . references - 2364 / 65 / 66 / 67 and 2410 - had signed crowns originally. Omega issued signed replacement crowns decades afterwards. And even those are difficult to source nowadays. Best, Art