The Omega Seamaster is one of the most iconic dive watches in history, second only to the Rolex Submariner in name recognition. But unlike the Sub, James Bond’s Omega of choice wasn’t always a dive watch.
The Seamaster name dates back to 1948 when it debuted as a water-resistant dress watch. Omega’s first Seamaster dive watch didn’t debut until a decade later in 1957 with the Seamaster 300, and the classic “Bond” Seamaster — the Diver 300M — has only been around since 1993.
Omega is the long-running official timekeeper of the Olympic Games, and the brand has gotten off to an early start in celebrating next year’s Winter Olympics in Italy by releasing a special-edition Seamaster that recalls some of the earliest watches to bear that name.

Who let the dog legs out?
In recent years, Omega has released a couple of Seamaster dress watches inspired by vintage models, namely the Seamaster 1948 which recalls the very first reference in the line. But the new Olympic-themed watch is the most exciting modern Seamaster dress watch yet because of one momentous detail: the return of “dog-leg” lugs.
If you’ve ever perused vintage Omega dress watches, you may have come across the term dog-leg lugs before. This was a lug style used by the brand on some of its Constellation dress watches throughout the 1950s and ’60s, with its last appearance seemingly occurring in the 1970s.