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thats a very good question....

 


thats a very good question.
 
a lot of it has to do with appealing to the masses and it is clear that the
majority of people who buy watches prefer bigger ones at the moment so thats
what they make.
they did make some nice pieces in their museum collection which is
effectively an overpriced re edition range, but only the 1948 Centenary is at
all similar to the pieces we've shown in this thread and that was in rose gold
at a price 4x what we'd pay for a vintage gold Connie.
as Tissot , Longines, Eterna and others all owned by Swatch are doing very
nice lines in re editions we can only hope that Omega will follow suit, but i
think that is a wistful hope.
they seem more concerned with new calibres at the moment which is not a bad
thing as they had some very stagnant years with the ETA calibres. the problem is
that they seem to have forgotten the good days in the past, the 30's-early 70's
when their in house calibres were the envy of many other brands. the 30mm's, the
6XX's, the 5XX's.
 
it would be lovely to see a line of re editions in steel cases at an
affordable price, but i dont think it will happen. besides, i still prefer the
vintage pieces

 
just my thoughts of course
Graham

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