Stellaris was the in-house watch brand for Sears & Roebuck for years, featuring various Swiss and Seiko mechanical movements – and this sharp serviced 1960s Stellaris R7 automatic mechanical skin diver watch is no different.
A nice bonus? This watch has a great military-esque stance to it. And add to that a great uniform lume patina throughout the dial and handset, coupled with a light UV fade to the black bezel, and you are left with everything a vintage skin diver should be.
And we aren't the only ones that love Stellaris skin divers - Fratello's Mike Stockton noted, "This watch could easily be nicknamed 'the poor man’s Omega Seamaster CK2913.' It’s a watch with a likable dial, enigmatic branding, 'crippled' hour hand, juicy lume, and a cosmic treatment to the crown grip...This Stellaris is my kind of watch." We tend to agree - we post these supremely comfortable to wear watches on our social media often!
At its 1886 inception, American company Sears - run by Richard W. Sears, a railroad agent - sold watches by mail order catalog - much akin to Amazon at its founding selling books, pocket watches were Sears' first commodity, but it would gradually add substantially to its offerings - just like Amazon.
Although Seiko produced Stellaris for Sears, preceding this, Stellaris was a brand name registered in 1963 by Swiss brand Mondia; while not a well-known brand, it produced some intriguing watches, such as the Mondia “Big Eye” chronograph and the Top Second. It also put out a watch model called Stellaris with an unusual fluid case.
How did Mondia and Stellaris evolve to be separate watch brands? No idea – another mystery lost to the ages, akin to how both brands would become victims of the Seiko-initiated Quartz Crisis. Watch periodical Fratello speculated, “Mondia was used as support to make Stellaris trustworthy."
"Or, I suppose another possible scenario is that the Mondia Stellaris became so popular that Mondia decided to make it a separate brand featuring its own range of watches. And there were quite a few of them, mostly later Stellaris electronic models.” Regardless, the Stellaris font and symbol didn’t change after it was established as a stand-alone brand, the clearest evidence of the relationship between the two.
Aside from Swiss movements, Stellaris watches also featured Hamazawa Ltd – founded in 1954 – automatic movements, and Hamazawa had an unofficial relationship with Seiko. Further, in the 1970s, Hamazawa took out several joint patents with Epson (one of the three core companies of Seiko Group in contemporary times) on non-watch related items.
Hamazawa appeared to have sold a lot of movements to various Japanese and foreign watch companies, and in 1983, it merged with two other companies, one of which was a major watch case supplier for Seiko-Epson. Subsequently, in 1986, this company was taken over by Seiko.
Back again to Fratello's Stockton, "There are still little wonders waiting to be unearthed. Stellaris is one of them for sure. [] And since I landed this Stellaris, I haven’t seen another one."
This Stellaris mechanical comes on canvas strap, and with nylon strap, rugged travel case, and springbar tool.
1960s Stellaris R7 Hamazawa-Powered Automatic Skin Diver
DIAL: Matte-black Stellaris-signed dial, with atypical applied hour indices and matching handset - look closely, the minute and hour hands closely mirror those found on the the iconic Seiko 6139, another indicator of Seiko involvement. Lume has a great uniform patina throughout dial and handset
CASE: Stainless-steel case case measures 38.5mm (41mm w/crown) x 44.5mm.
BEZEL: Bezel remains intact, with light wear but little UV fade.
CRYSTAL: Domed acrylic crystal, no cracks or scratches.
BAND: This Stellaris comes on a leather-backed olive-drab green canvas strap; it also comes with a black nylon strap.
MOVEMENT: This Stellaris watch is powered by a 17-jewel Seiko/Hamazawa 5026A automatic movement, a reliable and relatively simple to service mechanical movement. Although not performed by us, this watch performs as if it has been serviced in the last year or two.
CROWN: Unsigned stainless-steel crown.

