When it comes to Omega Speedmasters, none are more iconic than the “Moonwatch” that walked on the lunar surface in 1969. But Omega has more than a stroll across the moon on its astral-themed résumé.
Guest writer Zvonimir Svalina tells the story of Omega's Alaska Project and shares his 2008 Speedmaster Alaska LE ✓ Read it ...
Omega has just launched a new iteration of one of its most iconic timepieces, the Speedmaster ‘The First Omega in Space,’ and it’s a masterpiece of vintage design with modern technical innovation.
Omega‘s been teasing a big announcement for weeks with images on social media hinting at something technical in nature: macro pictures showed just a coiled spring such as those used in mechanical ...
Launched in 1959, the original watch (Ref. CK 2998) was the successor to the first Speedmaster model that Omega unveiled in 1957. It featured a symmetrical 39.7 mm case, a dark bezel, and slender ...
Let’s be clear: I’m not a pilot. The closest I’ve come to a cockpit is the window seat of a budget airline. But when Omega unveiled the Speedmaster Pilot yesterday, I felt a magnetic pull. This new ...
The Omega Speedmaster is perhaps the greatest tool watch in history. Created in the 1950s as a timing instrument for auto racing — it was the first watch to put a tachymeter on an external bezel — it ...
Ever wonder how the Omega Speedmaster became such a big deal? Naturally, it all started because NASA was looking for a watch to send to the moon. The year was 1964, the height of the Space Race. The ...
The story of Apollo 13, the aborted mission to the moon, is well known through the book, originally titled, “Lost Moon,” (Now called “Apollo 13”) co-written by Apollo 13 Flight Commander James A ...
Omega’s all-new Speedmaster Pilot doesn’t require any type of real-world pilot credentials and pays homage to the original Speedmaster, the one from 1957. This stainless-steel watch boasts a diameter ...
The Ref. BA 145.022 was given to the first man on the moon at a gala dinner in Houston’s Warwick Hotel on November 25, 1969, mere months after Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin walked on the lunar surface.
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