Inspired by the original Superocean from the 1950s, the Superocean Heritage combines iconic design features with a modern touch. Sporty and elegant, the Superocean Heritage is a true embodiment of style at sea. Featuring the iconic triangular-shaped hands as well as a unidirectional bezel with a polished ceramic ring, the Superocean Heritage is an elegant looking divers watch. Available in a variety of materials including stainless steel and 18k red gold, the Superocean Heritage Chronograph 44 features a range of colored dials. Offered either with a matching mesh bracelet, or a mesh-styled rubber strap fitting a folding buckle, this Superocean Heritage is powered by the Breitling Caliber 13, a COSC-certified chronometer.
Spread the cost with 0% APR* finance available from V12 Finance. More Details.
*On qualifying purchases
History of Breitling
Getting into the watch manufacturing business in the mid-1880s was no easy feat. Switzerland was experiencing the worst part of a long recession. Yet, despite the economic difficulty, social unrest and uncertainty about the future, 24-year-old Lon Breitling stayed true to his vision of creating instruments that could measure, divide and master time.
Today, Georges Kern and his team continue the rich tradition that began in a small workshop in St. Imier in 1884. The product portfolio was restructured around the brand’s three historic universes: Air, Land and Sea. Breitling redefined itself as “a generalist Swiss watch brand offering a cool, informal and inclusive alternative” to traditional watchmakers.
SUPEROCEAN: THE ULTIMATE SEA WATCH
“Breitlings Superocean is technical, durable and comes in a range of fun colors. Dive with it, surf with it, swim with it, hit the beach bar with it. Performance and style for all your water-based pursuits. In the 1960s, the new sport of scuba diving was all the rage. For divers, timing was everything, and Breitling set out to give them the most clear-cut dive watch possible by eliminating any feature that didnt support their lifesaving needs underwater.
This pared-down watch was named the Slow Motion. What remained were clean lines, chunky luminescent indexes, squared-off hands and a high-contrast dial ring, all aimed at maximum legibility. Practical, yes. But what people really fell in love with was the look. The new Superocean retraces the Slow Motion’s celebrated design codes, while adding modern features, like a ceramic-inlayed bezel and brightly colored dials. Broad hands and indexes in luminescent Super-LumiNova allow for easy readability underwater.”
Reviews
There are no reviews yet.