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Vintage Watches Guide
Rolex, Cartier, Omega, Longines, Jaeger-LeCoultre, Breitling, Seiko — more than 40 brands, from the 1930s to the 2000s. Discover our complete guide: how to choose, authenticate and care for a vintage watch, the reference calibres, the materials, the pitfalls to avoid, and answers to the most frequently asked questions.
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What is a vintage watch?
In horology, the term vintage watch refers to a watch manufactured at least twenty to thirty years ago — generally between the 1930s and the 1990s. What distinguishes a vintage watch from a simple recent pre-owned watch is the age of its components, the machining methods of its era, and the natural patina that has developed on its materials. A dial patinated by time — whether tropical (an even change of colour), stardust (microscopic sparkles), or spider (cracks) — cannot be artificially reproduced. This is what makes each vintage watch unique.
Not to be confused with neo-vintage: watches produced in the 90s-2000s, too recent to be considered classic vintage, but whose design continues the legacy of historic pieces. Neo-vintage is generating growing interest, notably in Omega Seamaster from the 90s or TAG Heuer from the same era.
Why buy a vintage watch rather than a new watch?
The reasons collectors and enthusiasts are drawn to vintage horology are numerous. From an aesthetic point of view, watches from the 50s-80s offer proportions, dials, and finishes that modern production no longer replicates — cases measuring 34 to 36 mm (the classic men’s format of the era, now back in fashion), hand-painted dials with applied indices, dauphine or leaf hands in blued steel. From a mechanical standpoint, vintage watches provide access to manufacture movements — designed and entirely manufactured by the brand — at prices often lower than those of modern ébauche movements. A Longines Flagship from the 1960s with a manufacture calibre 340 costs, on the pre-owned market, a fraction of the price of a new Longines equipped with a standard ETA movement.
From a financial perspective, the pre-owned market makes it possible to access maisons such as Rolex, Cartier or Omega at often 30 to 50% below the price of new — for pieces that have already absorbed the initial depreciation and that, in some cases, retain or increase their value over time. From a stylistic point of view, a vintage watch stands out immediately from modern productions — it conveys a culture, expertise, and a taste for objects that have a history.
The major families of vintage watches
Vintage dress watches (dress watches)
Dress watches — or dress watches — are slim, understated timepieces designed to be worn with a suit or formal attire. Round or rectangular cases from 33 to 36 mm, clean dials with applied indices, mechanical hand-wound or automatic movements, leather straps. The classic references: Longines Flagship, Omega De Ville, Jaeger-LeCoultre Master, Piaget Protocole, Cartier Tank. Dress watches in 18-carat gold or vermeil represent the most classic segment of vintage.
Vintage dive watches (dive watches)
Vintage dive watches are the quintessential tool watches — designed to withstand pressure, water, and shocks. Unidirectional rotating bezel, screw-down crown, reinforced water resistance, legible dials with luminous material (radium, then tritium, then Super-LumiNova). Historical references: Rolex Submariner, Omega Seamaster 300, Blancpain Fifty Fathoms, Longines Legend Diver, Yema Superman, Seiko Turtle. Important: the water resistance of a vintage watch is no longer guaranteed after decades — the gaskets deteriorate over time.
Vintage chronographs
The chronograph — a complication that measures time intervals — is one of the most collected categories in vintage watchmaking. Dials with sub-registers, pushers, tachymetric scales printed on the bezel or dial. Collector references: Omega Speedmaster (the « Moonwatch »), Breitling Navitimer, Heuer Carrera / Autavia / Monaco, Zenith El First, Universal Genève Compax / Tri-Compax . The most sought-after chronograph calibers: Lémania 321, Valjoux 72, Venus 175, Landeron 48, Valjoux 7750.
Vintage pilot watches (pilot watches)
Designed for pilots, vintage pilot watches are distinguished by highly legible dials, luminous Arabic numerals, and often complications such as the chronograph or slide rule. The Breitling Navitimer (with its circular slide rule), the IWC Mark XI, and the Longines Hour Angle (designed with Charles Lindbergh) are the historical references of the category.
Vintage-Jewelry watches
Worn as Jewelry as much as as watches, vintage-Jewelry watches prioritize aesthetics and noble materials over technical complications. Cartier Panthère (articulated link bracelet), Piaget in solid gold with hard-stone dials, Bvlgari Bvlgari with engraved bezel. This is the segment where Cartier and watchmaker-jewelers dominate — watches where design and material matter as much as the movement.
Understanding vintage watch movements
Hand-wound mechanical movement
The hand-wound movement is the oldest and most traditional type of movement. Energy is supplied to the movement by manually turning the crown — a daily gesture that forms part of the ritual of owning a mechanical watch. Hand-wound movements are generally thinner than automatic ones (no rotor), which allows for slimmer cases — this is why they are frequently found in dress watches and vintage chronographs. Reference calibers: Omega 269, Longines 30L, Valjoux 7733 (chronograph), Lémania 321 (Speedmaster), Venus 175.
Automatic movement
The automatic movement (or self-winding movement) winds itself thanks to a rotor that rotates with the motion of the wrist. More practical for daily wear — no need to wind the watch every day if it is worn regularly. Automatic calibers are generally thicker due to the rotor. Reference calibers: Omega 552 / 565 (Seamaster, Constellation), Longines 340 (Flagship), ETA 2824 / 2892, Seiko 7S26 / 6R15, Valjoux 7750 (automatic chronograph).
Quartz movement
The quartz movement uses a quartz oscillator powered by a battery to regulate time. More accurate than a mechanical movement (a drift of a few seconds per month versus a few seconds per day), quartz does not require winding. Introduced in the late 1960s with the Seiko Astron (1969), quartz triggered the “quartz crisis” that nearly swept away Swiss mechanical horology. Many vintage luxury watches from the 70s-90s are equipped with quartz movements — the Cartier Tank Must quartz, Omega De Ville quartz, Longines La Grande Classique. Vintage quartz should not be underrated — it is a deliberate choice of precision and finesse, not a compromise.
The materials of vintage watches
Stainless Steel
Stainless steel (316L steel) is the most common and most robust material on vintage watches. Resistant to corrosion, scratches, and shocks — it is the material of dive watches, sporty chronographs, and everyday watches. Vintage steel rarely develops a visible patina, but the finishes (brushed, polished, satin) gain character over time.
18k Gold (750‰)
18k gold (750 thousandths of pure gold) is the reference noble metal in luxury watchmaking. Available in yellow gold, rose gold, and white gold. Vintage solid gold watches — Piaget, Cartier Tank Louis, Rolex Day-Date — represent the noblest segment of the vintage collection. The intrinsic value of the metal provides a price floor.
Vermeil
Vermeil is 925 sterling silver covered with a layer of gold (minimum 3 microns, 20 microns at Cartier). It is the signature material of Cartier Must. More noble than gold-plated (brass base). Vermeil develops a warm patina over time — avoid prolonged contact with water and perfumes.
Gold-plated
Gold-plated is a thin layer of gold deposited on a brass or common metal base. Common on watches from the 60s-80s (Longines, Omega, Tissot). Gold plating wears over time — the edges and angles are the first affected. The quality of the plating varies: 10 microns (entry-level) to 80 microns (high quality). Gold-filled is a thicker and more durable variant, common on American watches (Bulova, Hamilton).
How to choose your first vintage watch
Defining your style and use
The first question to ask is not « which brand? » but « for what purpose? ». A slim dress watch in 34 mm on a leather strap for everyday wear and formal attire. A sporty chronograph in 38-40 mm for a more relaxed wear. A dive watch for those who like a tool-and-sporty style. Choosing the format (round, rectangular, cushion, tonneau) and the diameter is just as important as choosing the brand.
Defining your budget
The vintage watch market is accessible to all budgets. Our budget collections: under €500 (Seiko, Citizen, Orient, Tissot, LIP vintage), €500 to €1,000 (Longines, Omega Genève, Cartier Must quartz), 1,000 to 2,000 € (Omega Seamaster, Cartier Tank Must Vermeil, Longines Conquest), more than 2,000 € (Rolex, Cartier Santos, Omega Speedmaster, Jaeger-LeCoultre).
Check authenticity and condition
Authenticity is the main concern when purchasing a vintage watch. Elements to verify: the dial (typography, logo, “Swiss Made” or “Swiss”), the hands (shape and finish matching the reference), the movement (original calibre, serial number), the case (hallmarks, serial number, traces of excessive polishing), the original bracelet or Buckle. A “relumed” (repainted) dial or a replaced movement significantly diminish the value of a piece. At Atelier Victor, every watch is authenticated by our experts — you do not have to carry out these checks yourself.
The pitfalls to avoid
The vintage market involves risks that buyers should know. Frankenwatch: watches assembled with parts from different watches (dial from one reference, case from another, movement from a third). Repainted dials: dials whose patina has been artificially added or whose text has been retouched. False vintage: recent watches artificially aged to resemble vintage pieces. Abnormally low prices: if a Rolex Submariner vintage is offered at too low a price, it is a warning sign. Going through a specialized dealer with an authenticity guarantee eliminates these risks.
Maintaining your vintage watch
Watchmaking servicing
A vintage mechanical watch requires a complete service every 4 to 5 years (every 3-4 years for high-frequency movements). The service includes complete disassembly of the movement, ultrasonic cleaning, replacement of the gaskets, oiling, adjustment, and precision testing. At Atelier Victor, every watch is serviced before being offered for sale — you receive a watch ready to wear, covered by a one-year mechanical warranty.
Daily precautions
A few simple rules to preserve a vintage watch: avoid immersion in water (even for old dive watches — the seals are no longer reliable after decades), avoid magnetic fields (phones, speakers, bag clasps), avoid direct shocks to the crown. For vermeil or gold-plated watches: avoid contact with perfumes, creams, and chemicals. Wipe with a soft cloth after each wear. Store in a presentation box or a soft Pouch.
Vintage watches by origin
Vintage Swiss watchmaking
Switzerland represents the historical heart of mechanical watchmaking. The most collected vintage Swiss manufactures: Rolex (Genève — Oyster Perpetual, Submariner, Daytona), Omega (Bienne — Seamaster, Speedmaster, Constellation), Longines (Saint-Imier — Flagship, Conquest), Jaeger-LeCoultre (Le Sentier — Reverso, Memovox), Zenith (Le Locle — El Primero), Breitling (Grenchen — Navitimer), Tissot (Le Locle), Universal Genève (Polerouter, Compax), IWC (Schaffhausen).
Vintage française watchmaking
France has its own watchmaking tradition, distinct from Switzerland. LIP (Besançon — Himalaya, Dauphine, Mach 2000 designed by Roger Tallon, Electronic R27) and Yema (Morteau — Superman, Yachtingraf, Rallygraf) are the two most collected French brands. Vintage française watchmaking offers remarkable value for money and a distinct stylistic character.
Vintage Japanese watchmaking
Japan is the world's second watchmaking nation. Seiko (6138/6139 chronographs, Turtle divers, Grand Seiko), Citizen (Promaster, Flyback chronographs) and Orient (King Diver, Weekly Auto) produce in-house manufactured movements entirely conceived in-house — a technical independence that few Swiss brands possess. Vintage Japanese watches offer colorful dials and bold designs unavailable in Swiss watchmaking, at very accessible pre-owned prices.
Parisian luxury watchmaking (jeweler-watchmakers)
Cartier (Tank, Santos, Pasha, Panthère) and Piaget (ultra-thin solid gold watches) represent the jeweler-watchmaker category — maisons where the watch is first and foremost a jewel, then a timekeeping instrument. Bvlgari (Roma, Bvlgari Bvlgari) adds an Italian touch to this category.
The question of the "full set"
A full set refers to a watch sold with all of its original accompanying elements: box (brand presentation case), papers (dated and stamped warranty certificate by an official retailer, with the reference and serial number), original bracelet, and ideally the purchase invoice and user manual. In the vintage market, a complete full set is rare — the older the watch, the less common it is to have these documents. The presence of the full set significantly increases the value of a vintage watch: from 10 to 30% depending on the brands and models. For brands with archives (Longines, Omega, Patek Philippe), an archive extract may be requested to trace the history of a watch.
Patina Dials: Understanding the Types of Patina
The patina of a dial is the natural evolution of its materials over time — a transformation actively sought after by collectors.
- Tropical dial — uniform color change of the dial (a black dial turning chocolate brown, a blue one becoming turquoise). Highly sought after on Rolex Submariner and Omega Seamaster.
- Spider dial — fine cracks on lacquered dials, common on Cartier Tank Must Vermeil with burgundy or black dial.
- Stardust dial — micro-glitters that appear on certain dials over time, creating a shimmering effect.
- Aged hands and indices — period luminescent materials (radium, tritium) change color over time, turning from white to cream, honey, or even brown. This patina must be uniform between the hands and the indices to be appreciated.
A well-preserved aged dial — without retouching or restoration — can increase the value of a vintage watch. A repainted or retouched dial (often identifiable by an overly uniform color or slightly different typography) diminishes its value.
Frequently Asked Questions — vintage & luxury pre-owned watches
What is the difference between a vintage watch and a pre-owned watch?
In horology, the term vintage generally refers to a watch made at least twenty to thirty years ago (from the 1930s to the 1990s). A pre-owned watch can be from any era, including recent models. Neo-vintage refers to watches from the 1990s-2000s — too recent to be classic vintage, yet with a historical design. At Atelier Victor, our catalogue covers all three categories.
Are vintage watches reliable for everyday wear?
Yes, provided they are properly serviced. Every watch sold by Atelier Victor is fully serviced by our watchmakers — the movement disassembled, cleaned, oiled, adjusted, and tested — and covered by a one-year mechanical warranty. Swiss and Japanese calibers from the 1950s-1980s are robustly designed and easy to service.
How do you choose between manual, automatic, and quartz?
Manual winding offers the elegance of a slim case and the ritual of winding your watch each day — it is the choice of purists. Automatic is more practical for everyday wear — the watch winds itself with the movement of the wrist. Quartz offers the best precision and requires no winding — it is the choice of practicality. No type is superior to another — each suits a use and a preference.
What is a « Frankenwatch » and how can you avoid it?
A Frankenwatch is a watch assembled with components from different watches — dial from one reference, case from another, movement from a third. The result may visually resemble an authentic watch, but it is not one. The best protection: buy from a specialized dealer who opens and checks each watch, and who guarantees authenticity. At Atelier Victor, each piece is inspected by our watchmakers — lifetime authenticity guarantee.
Can you wear a vintage diving watch underwater?
We recommend avoiding immersion for any vintage watch — even models designed for diving (Rolex Submariner, Omega Seamaster 300, Yema Superman). Gaskets deteriorate over time and no longer guarantee the original water resistance. For everyday wear, rain and handwashing are not a problem on steel models.
Is the patina of a dial a flaw or an asset?
An asset, provided it is natural and even. A tropical dial (uniform color change), a spider dial (fine cracks), or patinated markers (from white to cream) are actively sought after by collectors. By contrast, a dial that has been touched up, repainted, or shows humidity stains loses value.
Are vintage luxury watches a good investment?
At Atelier Victor, we approach watchmaking from the perspective of a purchase for pleasure — the choice of an object to wear and appreciate every day. While demand for certain historical models has evolved favorably on the pre-owned market, we prefer to guide clients toward a piece that matches their aesthetic and mechanical expectations rather than provide financial recommendations.
Which vintage watch for a woman?
Consult our selection of vintage watches for women. The most-worn models: Cartier Tank Must in vermeil, Cartier Panthère, Omega De Ville, Piaget in gold, Longines La Grande Classique. Vintage watches for women offer restrained proportions (20 to 28 mm), naturally suited to feminine wrists.
Which first vintage watch should I start with?
For a first purchase, we recommend favoring a renowned brand with a common caliber (easy to service and maintain). Under 500 €: Seiko automatic, Orient Weekly Auto, LIP Dauphine. From 500 to 1,000 €: Longines Flagship, Omega Genève. From 1,000 to 2,000 €: Cartier Tank Must Vermeil, Omega Seamaster.
Where can I find a replacement bracelet for a vintage watch?
Atelier Victor offers watch straps compatible — in alligator leather, calfskin, steel, Milanese mesh, and NATO, with all lug widths (14 mm, 18 mm, 20 mm, 22 mm). Contact us via WhatsApp.
Discover our collections by brand: Rolex, Cartier, Omega, Longines, Jaeger-LeCoultre, Breitling, Seiko, Yema. Or by budget: -€500 · €500-1,000 · €1,000-2,000 · +€2,000.
Have a question about our vintage watch catalog? Contact us via WhatsApp or by email.
Need advice or have a hesitation? Our experts are here to assist you.












