In 1948, the year Omega turned one hundred, the company took the waterproof watches it had spent the war building for British forces and made them into something a person could wear to dinner. It called the line the Seamaster, and this Omega Seamaster 2848 is a mid-1950s descendant of that idea. Omega had supplied more than a hundred thousand waterproof watches to the British military between 1940 and 1945, and when the fighting stopped it kept the part that mattered: a rubber O-ring gasket, taken from submarine engineering, that sealed a case far better than the old lead and shellac ever had.
What Omega sold under the Seamaster name in 1948 was not a diver. That watch, the Seamaster 300, would not arrive for another nine years. This first Seamaster was the everyman Omega: slim, stainless, short in the lug, and meant to look like nothing in particular, a watch for what the company’s own advertising called town, sea and country. It was water-resistant enough to go through an ordinary life without a second thought, the first watch Omega ever sold as a named family, and it is still the oldest line the company makes. An early Seamaster is where all of that began.
This 2848 is that everyman Seamaster caught in the middle of the 1950s, dressed for the town end of the promise. Capped in gold over steel, it wears its original cream dial, quartered by a fine cross-hair, the sort of dress-leaning watch a person bought to do everything in. Inside is Omega’s caliber 501, a full-rotor automatic from the company’s mid-1950s self-winding family, in the standard Seamaster grade rather than the chronometer-adjusted 501 that Omega saved for the Constellation. We will not borrow that pedigree to flatter it. Winding itself on the wrist was the whole point of a watch meant to be forgotten there.
The case measures 34.5mm across but wears bigger on the broad squared lugs collectors call the beefy-lug Seamasters. The word capped is doing real work: the front, bezel and lugs are a solid skin of gold over a stainless steel core, a thicker thing than plating or gold fill. The cream dial has taken on an even bloom of age, a warm tone reaching edge to edge rather than pooling in a corner, and the dauphine hands and gold batons have followed it toward a soft rose. Nothing has been refinished, and the gold wears the soft marks of a life on the wrist, left where they fell. Inside the caseback, the reference tells a small story of its own: stamped 2846 10 SC over 2848, two references on one back, because Omega shared a single caseback between the sibling models and this Omega Seamaster 2848 carries both.
It comes on its Omega bracelet, gold plate over a steel core with the signed folding clasp, a lighter build than the capped case it serves and a fair reminder of how many ways the era found to wear gold. Serviced in-house at OTTUHR and backed by our 2-year mechanical warranty, it is ready for the ordinary life it was made for. The watch Omega built to be forgotten on the wrist has quietly become the one collectors go looking for.
