Aqua blue Seamaster?

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Been on the hunt for a 60s Seamaster and come across an aqua blue one from 1962. Not come across one of these before. Are they rare or quite common?

 
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Hmmm,
Never seen one.
The M in omega looks bad could be a distortion in the crystal. The minute marks look inconsistent, the seamaster does look pretty good, swiss made seems a little jammed up.
Still that colour, I think redial.
Time for the experts to weigh in.

Ps case is polished, so may have done the dial when they did the case.
PPS the fab swiss indicates French case, and the blue is a French colour,so maybe. Keen to find out.
 
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Im on redial here, a decent one, look at the ‘am’ and the ‘ste’ in Seamaster, the transition between letters look very odd. Eventhough this could be a very nice watch if you like the look of it, it has no collector value.
 
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It seems that I still have a lot to learn.. For me it's a nice looking watch even it has no "collector value" 😀
 
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It seems that I still have a lot to learn.. For me it's a nice looking watch even it has no "collector value" 😀
Yes, that's what I'm trying to say. Not everything has to meet collectible standards. For watches, if you like it, imagine yourself enjoying wearing it, and the price is not outrageous, then go for it. 😀
 
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Is that the one at fine watch club? If so, they do say it's a redial (or refinished) in the description. For once!
 
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Is that the one at fine watch club? If so, they do say it's a redial (or refinished) in the description. For once!

It is! I like the look of it but probably a bit pricey for me (it’s just short of £1.5k)

Was very curious with the blue dial as just very different to all of the others.
 
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Very good but maybe a South Korean redial, they do some quality work in funky colours over there. Some crap too but this a good one. Probably trying to jump onto the Tiffany Rolex blue craze. If legit it is very rare indeed. The case has certainly seen a lot of intervention. @Bruce235 Fab Suisse on the dial indicates sold in the French market, not sure it does so on the inner case markings and it says Swiss made so can't be French made...
 
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Based on it being a redial but also quite a stunning watch to look at, what do you think would be a fair price for it? Currently up for £1,450 which seems high to me.
 
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A AD7
Based on it being a redial but also quite a stunning watch to look at, what do you think would be a fair price for it? Currently up for £1,450 which seems high to me.
I would say a third of it
 
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A AD7
It is! I like the look of it but probably a bit pricey for me (it’s just short of £1.5k)

Was very curious with the blue dial as just very different to all of the others.

I spotted it too and nearly posted it here to validate it as I hadn't seen the dial colour before... But then noticed they actually do state it's a redial in their blurb somewhere.
 
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A AD7
Based on it being a redial but also quite a stunning watch to look at, what do you think would be a fair price for it? Currently up for £1,450 which seems high to me.

Search the forum for fine watch club. I used to look at their watches from time to time and was even considering visiting them. But then I joined this forum and read some posts that put me off dealing with them full stop. Obviously make your own mind up but I'd encourage you to do your research. Buy the seller...
 
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I spotted it too and nearly posted it here to validate it as I hadn't seen the dial colour before... But then noticed they actually do state it's a redial in their blurb somewhere.

Well that is rather definitive!
 
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With screenshot for added hilarity. See "mint" and "cannot lose money". And other assorted typos.

 
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I do think that we, the commentariat of Omega Forums, should develop a formula or theory for valuing such watches. It's really tricky.

On the one hand, it's not a piece that a hardcore collector would want. You say you're after a 1960s Seamaster, and I'm guessing that means you'd like a collectible watch that might hold value and be an heirloom piece that Omegaphiles will always deem worthy of a respectable collection. Whatever it says in the ad, this isn't that watch. Once the dial has been adulterated--no matter how attractively--it's lost its originality, and that tends to the be the highest standard for serious collectors. (There are even some among us who would prefer a badly scratched case that's never been polished to one that's been polished and looks brand new.)

On the other hand, it's still an Omega at its core, with the right movement inside, presumably working properly. And it's a good-looking watch, not one of those shoddily-re-dialed overpolished atrocities that are so common on eBay and Chrono24. I'm not a turquoise watch guy, but if I were, I'd wear that very happily. And 99% of the 1% of people who'd even notice my watch and see that it's an Omega wouldn't have any inkling that it didn't come from the factory looking just like that. (If such things even matter.)

I think valuing the watch comes down to a basic question: to what extent is this still an Omega? £1,450 is an Omega price---and a high-side one, seeing as 14763s sell from $500 USD up to about 2k, and that's for watches that haven't been modded.

Related to this, there's the twisty logic of how much the modification hurts the watch's Omega-value; likewise, if you think of this as a pretty blue watch, how much does the Omega-factor increase the value of what might otherwise be just a pretty blue watch?

---TL;DR---

Just my opinion: this is not a watch I'd still consider to be an Omega in any collectible sense, so I would not want to pay an Omega price for it---it's gone from being generally collectible to being a niche fashion piece, and I think the mod, as good as it looks, only hurts its monetary value (unlike some of the high-end, brand-name Bamford mods and the like that people do). I'd choose to see it now as a pretty blue watch that gains value from the vestigial Omega hardware and branding. Fossil makes something superficially similar for about $300. In my estimation, I'd say the Omega hardware and branding adds about $500 in physical and emotional value. $800 (about £620) is probably fair.
 
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This is a hard pass for me… Luminous hour markers but the hands appear to have no luminous at all (so replaced or refilled). Not a good look, pretty blue redial notwithstanding 😀
 
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I bought a similarly-colored Omega off eBay a couple of months ago, paid US$699. Mine is a 2888, cal 501, dated to 1958 by serial number. Although it wasn't advertised as a redial, I fully suspected it was, and I really didn't care. I loved the color and the design, so I bought it. Not as a collector piece, but a watch to wear and enjoy. It keeps great time.

https://www.ebay.com/itm/354754737435



For me, my vintage watches are like my collector cars. They may not be 100% original, but they look nice and operate well, and I enjoy them nonetheless.
Edited:
 
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