



Orient “Silver Crest” — 17-Jewel Hand-Wound Dress Watch
The pure one. No rotor, no fuss — just you and the mainspring.
This is vintage Orient at its most classically elegant: a clean silver dial with a fine linen texture catching the light, applied faceted baton markers paired with printed dot minutes, and the proud Orient crown-and-lions crest sitting beneath 12. A single date window at 3 keeps it uncluttered. It’s a hand-wound watch — the kind you give a few turns each morning, a small daily ritual that connects you to the mechanism in a way no automatic quite does. All wrapped in a polished tonneau case on a black leather strap.
Inside runs a 17-jewel manual movement, marked Shockproof on the dial — simple, robust, and endlessly serviceable, the hallmark of Orient’s build quality in this era. This one has been opened, serviced, and held to the timegrapher until the rate settled true.
Hand-wound vintage dress watches are the quiet connoisseur’s corner of the market — no battery, no rotor, just pure mechanical timekeeping in its most honest form. On leather, this silver Orient wears clean, slim, and timeless under a cuff.
The Details
◦ Movement — Orient 17-jewel, manual wind (hand-wound)
◦ Reference — 742207A
◦ Case — 38mm stainless steel, tonneau form
◦ Dial — Silver, linen texture, applied baton markers, Orient crest
◦ Function — Date at 3
◦ Strap — Black leather (20mm)
◦ Origin — Japanese Orient
◦ Power reserve — 20hr+ on a full wind
Why buy from Bengal Curator
✅ Only 1 in this store — sold once, gone forever
✅ Fully serviced & timegrapher-verified before listing
✅ 6-month warranty
✅ Easy returns on arrival — inspect before you commit
✅ Free tracked & insured shipping, nationwide
✅ Arrives in a premium leather presentation box
A clean hand-wound dress watch is the one collectors reach for when they want simple done right — and Orient’s silver-crest dials are getting quietly harder to find. One available. If you appreciate the ritual of winding, this is your watch.
৳5,700 — today.
Curated, serviced, and stood behind — by Bengal Curator.



