
Founded in Japan in 1950, Orient Watch has built a reputation for producing reliable mechanical timepieces that combine in-house craftsmanship with exceptional value. The brand traces its roots back to 1901, when Shogoro Yoshida began selling watches in Tokyo, laying the foundation for what would become one of Japan's most respected watchmakers. Unlike many manufacturers, Orient has remained committed to developing and producing its own mechanical movements, giving the brand a distinct identity among watch enthusiasts.
Today, Orient continues to balance traditional watchmaking with modern design across a range of well-defined collections. The Bambino is celebrated for its timeless dress watch styling, while the Mako and Kamasu series are trusted dive watches known for their durability and everyday versatility. The Sun and Moon collection showcases elegant complications, and the Contemporary range blends classic aesthetics with practical functionality. As part of the Epson Group, Orient continues to uphold its heritage of dependable Japanese engineering, offering mechanical watches that deliver quality, precision, and lasting value for collectors and first-time enthusiasts alike.
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about hamilton watches
A Brand Built on Timing That Mattered
Hamilton began in Lancaster, Pennsylvania in 1892, making pocket watches at a time when accuracy was not just desirable, but necessary. The brand’s early reputation was shaped by the railroads, where precise timekeeping helped bring order to a fast-moving and often dangerous transport network. That is where Hamilton’s “Watch of Railroad Accuracy” story begins.
From there, Hamilton moved through some of the most important chapters in modern watchmaking. The brand supplied timepieces to soldiers, pilots and naval forces, pausing consumer production during the Second World War to focus on the U.S. Armed Forces. That military and aviation connection still runs through the collection today, especially in the Khaki Field, Khaki Aviation and Khaki Navy ranges.


about hamilton watches
Purpose, Character and Screens
Few brands cover as much ground as naturally as Hamilton. It can be a field watch, a pilot watch, a dive watch, a dress watch or one of the most recognisable watch designs in cinema. The brand has appeared in more than 500 films and television shows, not simply as product placement, but because its watches help define characters, eras and stories. From military films to science fiction, Hamilton has become one of the watch world’s strongest links between design and storytelling.
That matters because Hamilton watches rarely feel anonymous. A Khaki Field has the straightforward confidence of a proper utility watch. A Jazzmaster brings the brand into cleaner, more refined territory. A Ventura remains unmistakable because nothing else really looks like it. Even the more everyday pieces tend to carry some link to the brand’s wider history.
Hamilton’s strength is balance: heritage without feeling old-fashioned, Swiss made watchmaking without gatekeeping, and character without losing practicality.


about hamilton watches
American Spirit, Swiss Made
Hamilton combines its American design heritage with Swiss watchmaking. The brand is part of the Swatch Group, and its current watches are Swiss made, with automatic, mechanical and quartz movements across the collection.
That mix is what gives Hamilton its particular appeal. The watches have the confidence and character of American design, but the movements and manufacturing standards of Swiss watchmaking. You see it in the field-watch simplicity of Khaki Field, the cockpit clarity of Khaki Aviation, the water-ready practicality of Khaki Navy, the refined everyday feel of Jazzmaster, the mid-century shape of Ventura and the heritage-led design of American Classic.












