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Rare Vintage Seiko x Playboy Y749-4000 Men’s Digital Sports Watch JDM 1980s - Image 1
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Rare Vintage Seiko x Playboy Y749-4000 Men’s Digital Sports Watch JDM 1980s

DIRECT PRICE SAVE 10%
EBAY PRICE$79.00
DIRECT -10%$71.10

DESCRIPTION

For sale is an ultra-rare vintage Seiko x Playboy men’s digital wristwatch, reference Y749-4000. Produced exclusively for the Japan Domestic Market (JDM) in the 1980s, this model is a standout crossover collectible, combining Seiko’s early digital innovation with iconic Playboy branding. The watch is partially working correctly. For an unknown reason, it does not enter the chronograph mode. Aside from this issue, all other features and functions of the watch appear to be working properly, including time display, alarm, dual time, day/date, and backlight. All parts of the watch are original, including the case, crystal, metal bracelet, and the extremely rare Playboy-signed clasp. The watch is in good physical condition with signs of use and age. Photos best describe its physical condition and originality. Functions include alarm, dual time, day/date, and backlight, displayed through a classic LCD layout. The black and gold color scheme paired with unmistakable Playboy branding makes this one of the most visually distinctive and culturally iconic digital watches of the 1980s. Key Details • Brand: Seiko x Playboy • Reference: Y749-4000 • Movement: Digital quartz • Market: Japan Domestic Market (JDM) • Era: 1980s • Functions: Alarm, Dual Time, Day/Date, Backlight • Chronograph: Not functioning (does not enter chronograph mode) • Bracelet: Original metal bracelet • Clasp: Original Playboy-signed clasp • Condition: Partially working; good physical condition • Rarity: Exceptionally rare collector’s model A bold and historically significant piece that captures a unique moment in both Seiko’s digital history and Playboy’s cultural legacy. Ships carefully. Feel free to message me with any questions.
BRAND:
Seiko
UNIT CONDITION:
Pre-owned - Fair
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► ARCHIVE FILE: SEIKO — BRAND HISTORY

Seiko begins with Kintaro Hattori, who opened a shop selling and repairing clocks in Tokyo's Ginza district in 1881, at the age of twenty-one. He founded the Seikosha factory in 1892 to manufacture wall clocks, built Japan's first wristwatch, the Laurel, in 1913, and put the Seiko name on a dial for the first time in 1924. By mid-century his successors ran one of the most vertically integrated watch companies on earth, making everything from hairsprings to cases under its own roof.

Postwar Seiko sharpened itself through internal rivalry: two subsidiaries, Suwa Seikosha and Daini Seikosha, competed on the same briefs, giving the world Grand Seiko in 1960 and King Seiko in 1961, chronometer-grade watches aimed squarely at the Swiss. The point was made publicly when Seiko movements climbed the rankings of the Swiss observatory chronometry trials at Neuchatel and Geneva through the late 1960s, finishing among the very best mechanical entries by 1968.

Then came 1969, the pivotal year. In May, Seiko put the caliber 6139 on sale, one of the first automatic chronographs in the world and arguably the first to reach retail; a gold-dialed 6139 worn by astronaut William Pogue aboard Skylab in 1973 became the first automatic chronograph in space. On December 25, Seiko released the Astron, the first production quartz wristwatch, priced near the cost of a small car. The Astron rewrote the rules of accuracy and set off the quartz revolution that reshaped the entire industry.

Seiko's vintage divers are a collecting field of their own: the 62MAS of 1965 was Japan's first purpose-built dive watch, the 6105 of 1968 went to Vietnam on countless service wrists and later appeared on Martin Sheen's wrist in Apocalypse Now, and the cushion-cased 6309 of 1976 became the template for decades of affordable divers. Alongside them sit the Seiko 5 automatics, produced in staggering variety, which put a reliable day-date automatic on millions of wrists for very little money.

Collecting vintage Seiko is unusually friendly to research: the serial number on every case back encodes the year and month of production, and the model and dial codes let you verify that a watch left the factory the way it sits today. Condition and originality drive value, with replaced dials and hands common after decades of inexpensive servicing, so untouched examples carry a real premium. Grand and King Seikos from the 1960s offer Swiss-level finishing at a fraction of equivalent Swiss prices, which is why their reputation keeps growing.

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