Monochrome Watches
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The New Seiko Presage Arita Porcelain SPB293J1 and SPB319J1 (Live Pics & Price)

Simple time-only watches to bring the focus entirely on Japanese craftsmanship.

| By Brice Goulard | 5 min read |
Seiko Presage Arita Porcelain Dial SPB319J1

Since 2016, with the presentation of the Enamel and Urushi ChronographsSeiko‘s Presage collection has become involved in Japanese métiers d’art under the so-called Craftsmanship series. With a focus on high-end, handmade dials in enamel, lacquer, guilloché or porcelain, the Japanese brand connects to its cultural roots and to the location where these watches are manufactured. One of the most recurring themes is Arita Porcelain, which we’ve seen on several occasions since its introduction in 2019. Following the limited edition Blue Porcelain SPB267J1 we introduced earlier this year, Seiko now returns with two time-only watches that are part of the regular collection, the new Presage Arita Porcelain SPB293J1 and SPB319J1. 

Background

As we explained already when talking about the previous editions with porcelain dials, Arita porcelain is an ancient Japanese craft named after a small town located on the Japanese island of Kyushu. Towards the end of the 16th century, porcelain clay was found in the vicinity transforming the area into a hub for Japanese porcelain. Early wares used underglaze blue decoration, but by the mid-17th century, Arita was at the forefront as Japan developed overglaze “enamelled” decoration in a range of bright colours.

Edo-Period Japanese Arita Porcelain – Photo by the Met Museum

It wasn’t long before the porcelain products made in Arita became prized all over Japan for the high quality of their artistry. By the 19th century, it was being exported all around the world, dispatched by sea from Arita’s port of Imari. Although porcelain is also made elsewhere, porcelain made in Arita is uniquely Japanese, and so it seems fitting that Seiko has chosen to use this material for the dials of its new Presage watches.

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The new Presage Arita Porcelain watches

The two watches we’re looking at today are evolutions of previous models, such as the SPB093J1 – the first of its kind for Seiko – or the SPB171J1 with its milky-white dial and blue accents. They also continue the theme seen earlier this year with the blue-toned limited edition SPB267J1. But there are a few important things to say about the SPB293J1 and SPB319J1 that Seiko presents today. First of all, as you’ve seen, most previous Arita porcelain watches had a specific display with power reserve and date-by-hand (with the exception of the SPB095 launched in 2019, which was a time-and-date). Also, many previous versions were released as limited editions. Well, these characteristics aren’t part of the new models anymore.

Seiko Presage Arita Porcelain Dial SPB293J1

Both new watches of the Seiko Presage Arita Porcelain collection share the same case, the same overall design, the same technique for the dial, and the same movement and only differ when it comes to the strap/bracelet and the dial colour. Also, no confusion is possible when looking at them; they are genuinely part of the Presage collection, with the signature style of this line. As such, the proportions of the stainless steel case are the same with its 40.5mm diameter, a thickness (that we’d like to see reduced a bit, for the sake of elegance) of 12.4mm and an L2L of 48.8mm.

Seiko Presage Arita Porcelain Dial SPB293J1

The shape is classic, with a slim polished bezel, brushed twisted lugs with an internal polished bevel and an overall sense of restrained elegance. The watches still feature the usual conical crown and are topped by a dual-curved sapphire crystal with AR coating inside. The caseback is screwed and features a see-through window. Surprisingly, despite being elegant (almost dressy) watches, these new Seiko Presage Arita Porcelain are water-resistant to 100 metres.

Seiko Presage Arita Porcelain Dial SPB319J1

As always, the pièce de résistance with these Presage watches is the dial. Crafted under the supervision of Arita porcelain craftsman Hiroyuki Hashiguchi, they are executed in the traditional way by specialised artisans. An Arita porcelain dial is made of highly durable porcelain material that is more than four times harder than usual porcelain. It undergoes a casting process using ultra-high-precision moulds and is fired at a high temperature of 1,300 degrees. The dials are then glazed and fired multiple times to complete the highly challenging process – not far from a classic enamel process.

The dials of these new SPB293J1 and SPB319J1 are simple, clean, and traditional but also show great attention to detail. First of all, they aren’t flat but are approximately 1mm in height and curve downwards from the indexes to the dial centre to create a soft form with depth. As an elegant time-only watch, there is no date window to ruin the sleekness of the design. Both models have elongated, blue-toned Roman numerals and blued leaf-shaped hands. The main difference comes from the colour. The SPB293J1 features a traditional milky-white dial, while the SPB319J1 is slightly more daring, with its light blue colour – which was first unveiled on the SPB267J1 and that recreates the faint lapis lazuli colours created by a traditional dyeing technique called ruri zome.

Seiko Presage Arita Porcelain Dial SPB319J1

Another difference between these two models is how the watches are secured to the wrist. The white SPB293J1 is worn on a 3-link steel bracelet with a folding clasp, while the blue SPB319J1 is worn on a black leather strap with blue stitching and a folding clasp.

Inside the case of both Presage Arita Porcelain models is the well-known calibre 6R31. A relatively modern engine from the mid-range collection, this automatic movement beats at 3Hz and offers a comfortable 70h power reserve. It is lightly decorated with brushed bridges and stripes on the rotor.

Seiko Presage Arita Porcelain Dial SPB319J1

Availability & price

The new Seiko Presage Arita Porcelain SPB293J1 and SPB319J1 will be available from the permanent collection from June 2022. Both will be priced at EUR 1,750. For more details, please visit seikowatches.com.

https://monochrome-watches.com/seiko-presage-arita-porcelain-dial-spb293j1-and-spb319j1-hands-on-review-price/

5 responses

  1. i really don’t understand Seiko’s obsession with 40+ mm watches. they look awful on the vast majority of wrists

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  2. sorry, meant “40+ mm dress watches” 🙂 (but there’s no edit function on this godawful comment section. whose cousin developed this software?)

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  3. So close, but no cigar. Tone down the size, erase ‘Presage Automatic,’ reduce the ‘Seiko’ font and mate the dial to the LE KS case with 6L movement you’d have a cut-price Breguet. No other manufacturer could compete. But no, still too big, still that dubious 6R movement and a beautiful dial covered in branding tosh….

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  4. Ralph Waldo Emerson: A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds. This is one of Seiko’s, IMO. I’ve got the older 6R Cocktail Time, and a blue enamel. Both 40.5. Both would get more wrist time at 38. AND, preferably, shave a mm or two off the thickness. Caliber Corner gives unverified measurements of 27.4 mm x 5.25 mm. The former’s fine…it also suggests it’ll fit just FINE in a trimmer case. And 5.25 is a fat movement.

    So while I love the dials…the tonal shading on the blue dial gives a better sense of depth…I don’t love the movements. At this price point, it *should* be smaller and better.

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  5. I hate to disagree with James H here, but the complaint about “branding tosh” is poppycock to me. There are three clean lines of printed text here, and I vastly prefer that to a more sterile dial. I have the limited blue enamel, and am happy that branding is there, lest the dial get boring and loose character.

    That said, I would indeed have appreciated a 39x47x11mm case over the 40x48x12mm case, but in my experience these Presage cases wear brilliantly and comfortably. More comfortable, to name an example, than my 36mm Smiths field watch.

    My only gripe with Seiko’s white dialed enamel / porcelain / guilloché dials in these presages is that they seem to utterly refuse to use heat blued steel hands to complement these. I’m not a fan of the semi-translucent hand set they insist on using here.

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