There was a time, not so long ago, when reaching a major career milestone meant something tangible. Not a gift card, not a plaque for the wall, but a proper Swiss watch, presented by the company with your name engraved on the back, a lasting token of decades spent building something worthwhile. Throughout the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s, Omega was one of the most popular choices for American corporate presentation watches, and for good reason. The brand carried immense prestige, the quality was beyond question, and the watches themselves were handsome enough to be worn with pride for years afterward. What makes these corporate-dialed Omegas so fascinating to collectors today is the co-branded dial itself: Omega would produce special dial runs featuring a company’s logo, printed directly onto the dial surface at the factory, creating a watch that was simultaneously a standard Omega production piece and a completely unique artifact of corporate history. These are not aftermarket modifications or custom jobs. They are factory originals, produced to order, and they represent a chapter of Omega’s history that is only now receiving the collector attention it deserves.
This particular watch was presented to J.W. Dunnam in 1971, commemorating 30 years of service with a company whose “HF” logo sits prominently on the lower half of the dial. The engraving on the stainless steel caseback reads “J.W. Dunnam, 30 Years, 1971,” placing the start of Mr. Dunnam’s career around 1941, the early days of American involvement in the Second World War. It is a wonderful provenance detail that grounds this watch in a specific life and a specific era, adding a human dimension that standard production pieces simply cannot offer.
Powering this watch is the Omega caliber 550, a 17-jewel automatic movement with center seconds and no date complication. The Cal. 550 is part of the same legendary 500-series family that powered Omega’s Seamasters and other dress watches throughout the late 1950s and 1960s, featuring a full 360-degree rotor on ball bearings with bidirectional winding. The movement photo reveals the caliber in all its glory: the distinctive copper-toned rhodium plating that gives these Omega movements their unmistakable warm glow, the fully signed rotor reading “Omega Watch Co, Swiss, Seventeen 17 Jewels, Unadjusted,” and the serial number 28892159 on the main plate, which dates this watch to the late 1960s, perfectly consistent with the 1971 presentation date engraved on the caseback. It is a robust, reliable caliber that has earned its reputation as one of the great workhorses of mid-century Swiss watchmaking.
The dial is, without question, the centerpiece of this watch and the reason it stops people in their tracks. The upper half follows the classic Omega dress watch formula: a clean silver sunburst field, the applied Omega horseshoe logo at twelve o’clock, “Omega” and “Automatic” printed in black, and beautifully proportioned applied gold stick indices with luminous fills at each hour position. The handset is the proper dauphine style in gold, with a slender gold seconds hand sweeping the dial. “T Swiss Made T” at the bottom confirms tritium luminous material. But it is the lower half that transforms this from a standard Omega into something genuinely special. The “HF” corporate logo, rendered in vivid orange and black, occupies the space between center and six o’clock with a bold, graphic confidence that feels almost startlingly modern for a watch from this period. The geometric, interlocking letterforms have a distinctly mid-century graphic design sensibility, and the contrast of that bright orange against the silver dial and warm gold indices creates a visual tension that makes the watch impossible to ignore. It is, to us, one of the most visually compelling corporate dials we have had the pleasure of handling.
The 10k gold filled case presents with the warm, rich tone that gold-filled cases are known for, and the bezel retains a good amount of its original luster. The lugs are elegantly shaped with a gentle downward curve, and the profile shot reveals a slim, dressy silhouette that sits beautifully on the wrist. The original Omega-signed crown in gold sits at three o’clock, its knurled edge showing gentle wear but retaining the Omega logo clearly. The stainless steel caseback shows the expected wear for a watch that was clearly worn and enjoyed by its original owner, with the presentation engraving remaining perfectly legible. The inner caseback is stamped with the Omega Watch Co triangle logo, the case reference LU6304, case number M26468, and the notation “10K GF Bezel, Steel Back,” along with various service marks that speak to a watch that was properly maintained over the years.
For the collector who appreciates watches with stories to tell, this Omega is a remarkable find. It combines the mechanical excellence of a Cal. 550 automatic, the warm elegance of a gold-filled dress case, and the singular visual impact of a factory co-branded corporate dial into a package that is far greater than the sum of its parts. These presentation Omegas are becoming increasingly sought after as collectors recognize them as genuine pieces of both horological and social history, artifacts of an era when loyalty was rewarded with something you could wear on your wrist for the rest of your life. Mr. Dunnam’s 30 years of dedication earned him an Omega, and that Omega has now outlasted the company that presented it, the career it commemorated, and quite possibly the man who wore it. To us, that is what makes vintage watches so endlessly compelling. They carry lives within them, and this one carries a particularly good one.
