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Rare Vintage Orient Quartz Ladies Fancy Classic Bracelet Dress Watch JDM 1970s - Image 1
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Rare Vintage Orient Quartz Ladies Fancy Classic Bracelet Dress Watch JDM 1970s

DIRECT PRICE SAVE 10%
EBAY PRICE$49.00
DIRECT -10%$44.10

DESCRIPTION

Up for sale is a rare vintage Orient Quartz ladies fancy classic bracelet dress watch, produced for the Japan Domestic Market (JDM) during the 1970s. This elegant timepiece features a distinctive integrated bracelet design and refined styling that reflects the fashionable ladies’ dress watches of the era. The watch is in full working condition and is running properly. All parts of the watch are original, including the original Orient bracelet. The watch has signs of use and age. It should be noted that there is deterioration on the interior portion of the bracelet from age. The photos best describe its physical condition. Key Details: • Brand: Orient • Model: Quartz • Era: 1970s • Origin: Japan Domestic Market (JDM) • Movement: Quartz • Bracelet: Original Orient bracelet • Condition: Full working condition; signs of use and age; deterioration present on the interior of the bracelet A rare and attractive vintage Orient ladies dress watch that showcases the unique styling and craftsmanship of Japanese watchmaking during the 1970s. Ships carefully. Feel free to message me with any questions.
BRAND:
Orient
UNIT CONDITION:
Pre-owned - Good
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► ARCHIVE FILE: ORIENT — BRAND HISTORY

Orient's roots reach back to 1901, when Shogoro Yoshida opened a watch shop in the Ueno district of Tokyo, growing the business into Toyo Tokei, a maker of gauges, table clocks, and wristwatches. That firm did not survive the postwar economy, but in 1950 production restarted at the old Hino factory as Tama Keiki Co., renamed Orient Watch Company in 1951. From the start the company concentrated on affordable mechanical watches built around movements designed and manufactured entirely in-house, a discipline it never abandoned.

The 1960s brought genuine technical swagger. The Grand Prix 100 of 1964 carried 100 jewels as a marketing flourish on a sound automatic caliber, and the 1967 Fineness was among the thinnest automatic day-date watches in the world at the time. The keystone, though, is the 46-series automatic movement introduced in 1971, a robust, easily serviced workhorse that powered the bulk of the catalog for more than three decades and earned a reputation for shrugging off neglect.

Orient's mid-century dress watches, with their slim cases, clean dials, and applied markers, are the direct ancestors of the modern Bambino, which is why that line feels authentically vintage rather than retro pastiche. On the sport side, the King Diver and Weekly Auto models of the late 1960s, with inner rotating bezels and day-date displays, are favorites of the compressor-case era. Orient drew close to Seiko Epson beginning in 2001 and became a wholly owned subsidiary in 2009, but its movements remain its own.

Because Orient exported less aggressively to the United States than Seiko did, vintage examples are scarcer in Western markets, and that scarcity has not yet been fully priced in. King Divers with crisp inner bezels, honest Grand Prix models, and early 46-series automatics with original dials are the smart buys. Parts for the 46 family remain plentiful thanks to its long production run, which makes these among the most practical vintage Japanese watches to actually wear.

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