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Seiko 0842-7000 Tiger Eye Stone Dial

Seiko 0842-7000 Tiger Eye Stone Dial

Regular price €475,00 EUR
Regular price Sale price €475,00 EUR
Sale Sold out
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Important holiday notice: orders will be shipped from August 1.

Specs

 Model Seiko Quartz ‘Tiger Eye’
 Reference 0842-7000
 Year 1975
 Movement Quartz
 Dial Tiger eye stone dial
 Case size 36mm
 Lug width 18mm
 Service Fully serviced (May 2026)
 Condition Very good
 Warranty 3 months

The watch
This is one of those pieces I don’t come across often. A Seiko Quartz with a ‘Tiger Eye’ stone dial dial that genuinely surprised me the first time I saw it in person. It’s hard to capture in photos. In the right light it shifts in colour and depth, almost like it’s moving. I’ve handled quite a lot of Seikos, and this one easily sits among the most impressive dials I’ve seen.

The gold-plated case has a look that’s a bit different from the usual. The bezel has a subtle effect that gives it more character than most quartz Seikos from this period. It wears nicely and has that slightly bold, late 70s feel without being over the top.

Condition-wise, it’s been well kept. There are a few darker spots on the sides of the case, which is typical for SGP plating at this age, and some light marks on the caseback. The original crystal is still on the watch. There’s a small spot in the AR coating at 9 o’clock and a faint hairline scratch between 12 and 3, but you’ll only notice it if you really look for it. I chose to leave it untouched, because the original crystal and coating are part of what makes this piece what it is.

It was fully serviced in May 2026 by a professional watchmaker, so internally it’s exactly where you want it to be. Fully taken apart, cleaned, lubricated and put back together. It runs as it should and has been checked for consistent timekeeping.

Details
The Seiko 0824 is an early quartz calibre from the mid to late 1970s, built during a period when Seiko was setting the standard for quartz watchmaking. It sits in the same quality range as King Quartz, with a clear focus on durability and precision rather than cost-cutting.

It’s a jewel-bearing movement, which helps reduce friction in the gear train and improves long-term reliability. Like all quartz watches, it uses a battery to power a quartz crystal that vibrates at a fixed frequency. These vibrations are converted into electrical pulses that drive a step motor, moving the hands in precise one-second steps.

Accuracy was rated around ±15 seconds per month when new, which was strong for its time and still respectable today. The overall construction and finishing are a step above entry-level quartz, and that shows in how well these movements tend to hold up over decades.

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