My shop name is winebeerglasses, same as my former Etsy shop (see the last image).  I have a perfect 5-star customer rating from my buyers at Etsy for five years.  I left Etsy because Etsy's customer support is unbearable.  I decided to migrate to Bonanza.

I build and restore vintage automatic watches as a hobby using my knowledge in precision engineering and aesthetics.  All my watches are freshly lubricated, timegrapher regulated, and cleaned to restore the pleasure of wearing a vintage watch with its full functionalities and timing performance.

I do not use Chinese-made parts, even the spring bars are Swiss Made.



I restored this rare Oris Crystal watch with an ETA 2879 automatic movement with 21 Jewels. It is fitted in a New Old Stock original Oris case and an original Seiko bracelet, made in Japan in 70s. Old Seiko bracelets were made in Japan and in much higher quality than today's offering. This bracelet matches the dial and the case very well. The width across is 36 mm without the crown while the length from lug to lug is 43 mm. The bracelet width is 18mm. This case looks right with this particular dial.



This particular Oris has a very unique quarter-split two gold tone dial. It is time honored with patina and some paint loss in letters. The beauty only that is achieved by the passing of time.



ETA 2879 automatic movement is considered a high-end movement used by many expensive Swiss watch companies. It has day and date, quick settings for both. The beat rate is 21600 beats per hour for very high precision. For vintage watches, the timing accuracy is +- 2 minutes per day but this one can do much, much better than that.



As in any vintage watches, keep it from water. NOT water resistant!!!



The bracelet can easily fit a 7" wrist. My wrist is 6 3/4" and it fits loosely on mine.



The sale is final. However, I will offer 3-month free maintenance. The buyer only pays one way shipping back to me and I will fix it should it develop any issues and ship it back for free.



It is time to wear something different against the onslaught of electronics. In terms of the art of mechanical design, 60s and 70s were the peak. After that, it is all half electronics or full electronics.