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Seiko Silver Dial Stainless Steel Men's Watch SGEF59

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US$303.00US$279.00 Instock In stock
Style Model: SGEF59
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Replica Seiko Watches
About Our Replica Seiko Watches

Buy Replica Seiko watches today and feel pride when you put it on your wrist. We are certain that you will come back for more. Watches are among the few accessories that combine style and utility, they are cool and useful at the same time. Wouldn't you like to call a luxury watch like Seiko replica watches your own? An old saying goes: different people, different style, so the Seiko replica watches also is different. We have a wide range of watches which can suit for people’s different styles.

Seiko Silver Dial Stainless Steel Men's Watch SGEF59
Seiko Silver Dial Stainless Steel Men's Watch SGEF59 1 Seiko Silver Dial Stainless Steel Men's Watch SGEF59 2 Seiko Silver Dial Stainless Steel Men's Watch SGEF59 3 Seiko Silver Dial Stainless Steel Men's Watch SGEF59 4
  • WATCH INFORMATION
  • VIEW LARGE IMAGE
  • CARE & MAINTENANCE
  • CUSTOMER REVIEWS
  • RELATED PRODUCT

Watch Details

Stainless steel case with a stainless steel link bracelet. Fixed stainless steel bezel. Silver dial with silver-tone hands and index hour markers. Minute markers around the outer rim. Dial Type: Analog. Date display appears at the 3 o'clock position. Quartz movement. Scratch resistant Hardlex crystal. Solid case back. Case diameter: 40 mm. Case thickness: 9 mm. Push button deployment clasp. Water resistant at 100 meters/ 330 feet. Functions: hours, minutes, seconds, calendar. Dress watch style. Seiko Silver Dial Stainless Steel Men's Watch SGEF59.

Information

  • Brand:Seiko
  • Model:SGEF59
  • Gender:Men's
  • Movement:Quartz

Case

  • Case Size:40 mm
  • Case Thickness:9 mm
  • Case Shape:Round
  • Case Back:Solid
  • Bezel:Fixed Stainless Steel

Dial

  • Dial Type:Analog
  • Dial Color:Silver
  • Crystal:Hardlex
  • Hands:Silver-tone
  • Second Markers:Minute markers around the outer rim

Band

  • Band Type:Bracelet
  • Band Material:Stainless Steel
  • Band Width:20 mm
  • Clasp:Push Button Deployment

Features

  • Water Resistance:100 meters/ 330 feet
  • Calendar:Date display appears at the 3 o'clock position
  • Functions:Hours, Minutes, Seconds, Calendar
  • Features:Stainless Steel

Additional Info

  • Style:Dress Watches
  • Item Code:4954628142221
  • Internal ID:SE-SGEF59

Seiko SGEF59 Features:

  • 1. Seiko Watches provide the idea of high cost performance.
  • 2. Topnotch Men's Seiko collection has really attractive looks that outstanding high quality.
  • 3. Own same technology as genuine watch.
  • 4. Fashionable style provides you great experience.
  • 5. The model number of the watch is SGEF59.
  • 6. The first-rate watch enables you to catch the fashion trend.
  • 7. This particular preeminent watch is equipped with a fine Quartz movement.
  • 8. Highlight your style and accentuate your taste!
  • 9. An ideal and exceptional appearance enables you to attract the attention of public.
  • 10. Stainless Steel bracelet makes your wrist really feel very comfy.
  • 11. Two important features: water-proof and dust-proof function.
  • 12. The watch is extremely readable along with Silver Silver dial.
  • 13. To be the focus of a party.
  • 14. Case Diameter: 40 mm.
  • 15. We strive to make you 100% satisfactory.

Payment & Shipping

We will arrange the delivery of Seiko SGEF59 replica as soon as your payment is confirmed. Please make sure that your telephone number and email address are right, because the custome service representatives will contact you and identify your information, in order to deal with the shipments of your order. Generally, we deliver products through EMS, DHL, UPS, etc. And the tracking number will be sent to you via email once the watch is shipped. The shipping fee of any order is free. The package will be arrived about 7 to 15 days. We accept payment by PayPal, Visa/Master card, MoneyGram and Bank Transfer. If you pay by MoneyGram or Bank Transfer, we can offer you 15% off. If you have any questions about shipping and payment, please contact us freely, we'll be glad to help you!

Seiko Silver Dial Stainless Steel Men's Watch SGEF59 Watch Image

Seiko Silver Dial Stainless Steel Men's Watch SGEF59 1

Seiko Silver Dial Stainless Steel Men's Watch SGEF59 2

Seiko Silver Dial Stainless Steel Men's Watch SGEF59 3

Seiko Silver Dial Stainless Steel Men's Watch SGEF59 4

Watch Care & Maintenance

The 7 Essentials for Fine Watch Maintenance
Respect Your Fine Timepiece and it Will Last You a Lifetime
A fine timepiece is a precision instrument. Literally hundreds of precisely engineered components must work together in perfect harmony to keep your watch running properly. With proper care, the fine watch you buy today will become a treasured heirloom that you can pass down to your children who in turn can pass it on to their children. If you ignore your watch, however, you’re asking for trouble.
How can you ensure that your fine timepiece will continue to run forever?
Follow these seven simple rules and you’ll have already extended your watch’s life:
1. Know if your watch movement is quartz or mechanical and act accordingly
2. Never over-wind your hand-wound mechanical watch
3. Remember that water resistant doesn’t mean waterproof
4. Don’t wear your watch while playing golf or tennis
5. Remember to wear your watch
6. Keep your watch clean
7. Choose your watch repair facility wisely. (View Details)

Products Reviews:

Seiko SGEF59 Reviews
LOVE the silver-on-white design. Seiko Watch is the perfect size, but I was looking for something just a few mm bigger for that big, chunky look ... like a G-Shock. In white.
----Rating [Rating:(5 / 5 stars)]
Review by from Netherlands Oss
Seiko SGEF59 Reviews
Got the Seiko Silver Dial Stainless Steel Men's SGEF59 for my wife. She has not got it yet, but I'm sure she'll love it. it makes the best watch and gives you the extra incentives to make it the place to buy. I ordered the mirror color of the watch and believe me you could shave by looking at this watch no matter where you need shave'in.
----Rating [Rating:(5 / 5 stars)]
Review by from Mauritius Beau-bassin
Seiko SGEF59 Reviews
Timex Expedition - I think this Seiko watch is great for the money...It is comparable to Suunto watches plus it has temperature and a weather forecaster; that is pretty accurate. It's not too bad to look at either. Great watch from Timex.
----Rating [Rating:(5 / 5 stars)]
Review by from United Kingdom Glenrothes
Seiko SGEF59 Reviews
The only reason this doesn't get five stars is because of comfort. After several hours of wear the gems, as they move when you turn your wrist, tend to dig into the skin somewhat. I do love the design, the color, and the ease of telling time with the very readable watch face.
----Rating [Rating:(5 / 5 stars)]
Review by from United Kingdom Thornton Heath
Seiko SGEF59 Reviews
Super fast, and the Seiko watch is super amazing, definitely worth it, tks!
----Rating [Rating:(5 / 5 stars)]
Review by from Japan Higashi Hiroshima-shi

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Watches News

Tennis timing tales - Royal Oak Offshore Stanislas Wawrinka!

It's been a while now that timepieces have been constantly in the forefront of the biggest tennis stages around the world. In addition to the traditional clocks in the corners of the major stadiums, displaying local time and the duration of the matches, many of the best players on the planet are endorsing prestigious watch brands - and putting on a sponsored timepiece right after a match and just before the televised on-court interview has become one of the most predictable rituals. Of course, if a player is already wearing a watch that ritual isn't even necessary - and there have been more and more champions playing with a watch on their wrists.

This past weekend, the 102nd edition of the Australian Open offered us the first Grand Slam final ever between two players wearing a watch. One of them has been in the watchmaking spotlight for four years already: Rafael Nadal - who since the inception of his association with Richard Mille in 2010 had won seven Grand Slams with a hi-tech, hi-mech tourbillon on his right wrist - was vying for a 14th Grand Slam trophy that would tie him with Pete Sampras as the second most prolific Major title winner ever. The other was a talented late bloomer whose resurgence at the top coincided precisely with the use of a timepiece on his left wrist: Switzerland's own Stanislas Wawrinka.

Time for success

Somewhat against the odds and after an eerie match, 'Stan the Man' beat the Spanish world number one and went on to become only the second player in the last nine years outside the so-called 'Big 4' (Federer, Nadal, Djokovic, Murray) to win one of the 'Big 4' (the Grand Slams), also becoming the the first man in two decades to beat both of the top two seeds at a Grand Slam tournament. Moving to No. 3 in the rankings, the player from Lausanne also surpassed his friend Roger and is the top Swiss player right now.

Why this late resurgence at the highest level? Believe it or not, it all started when Stanislas Wawrinka decided to play with a watch on his wrist. He'd previously been a friend of small Zurich brand Maurice de Mauriac early on in his career and afterwards endorsed Hublot for a while, but it was when he recently became a friend of Audemars Piguet that he started playing with a watch on. And it was exactly last year at the Australian Open that the Lausanne player began to make a big impression: wearing an Audemars Piguet Royal Oak Offshore Chronograph Bumblebee (featuring Audemars Piguet's lightweight forged carbon), he took then world number one and Audemars Piguet ambassador Novak Djokovic to the limit, losing an epic 5-hour match that captured the imagination of the fans and was later voted the best match of the year.

Going toe-to-toe with Novak Djokovic until 12-10 in the fifth set gave Stanislas Wawrinka the belief he belonged to the elite. A few months later he beat Bovet ambassador David Ferrer in the final of the Portugal Open wearing the same Royal Oak Offshore Bumblebee, but during the summer changed to another timepiece; it was wearing a Royal Oak Offshore Chronograph new generation (44mm) that he qualified for his first Grand Slam semifinal ever at the US Open, again losing to Novak Djokovic in five sets, and for his first Year-End Championships, going through the group stage and losing to Novak Djokovic in the semis yet again.

Black watch, bête noire

In the beginning of the year, Stan - who knows I'm both a tennis and watch journalist - sent me a dedicated wristshot via Twitter from Chennai, where he was playing his first ATP World Tour tournament of the year: there was something new on his wrist, namely a Royal Oak Offshore Diver in black ceramics with orange touches. He won the tournament with it on and it was the watch he was wearing in his first round at the Australian Open. But something changed after that inaugural match in Melbourne Park: I was commentating for Eurosport and noticed he played the second round with a bare left wrist and then reverted to the Royal Oak Offshore Chronograph 44mm for the following matches - including the fourth round duel versus Tommy Robredo that finished right on time for me not to lose the flight to attend the Salon International de la Haute Horlogerie; in Geneva, Audemars Piguet's CEO François-Henry Bennahmias explained to me that there had been a problem with the strap, hence the change.

Stanislas Wawrinka was back wearing the lightweight Royal Oak Offshore Diver for his quarter-final rendezvous with Novak Djokovic, who prior to the tournament had announced that Seiko had replaced Audemars Piguet as his watch sponsor - the Japanese brand made the Serb a seven-figure offer he couldn't refuse. Just like Federer, Ferrer, Sharapova, Azarenka and most watch ambassadors, Djokovic doesn't play official tournaments with his timepiece on - only exhibition matches or in practice. In the end, 'Stanimal' (as his friend Federer affectionately calls him) exorcized a losing 14-match streak versus Novak with an epic 5-set win and then beat Tomas Berdych (the Czech that Wawrinka rates as the best watch connoisseur among tennis pros, albeit not having a sponsorship) in the semis to qualify for the final versus Rafael Nadal, who had beaten Roger Federer in the other semi.

Stan has always been a great ballstriker and his majestic one-handed backhand made him a cult player, but he's been understandably obscured by the ominous shadow of Roger Federer in Switzerland. Mentally, his reputation was a bit shaky at the highest level: coming into Melbourne Park, he had lost 39 of his last 40 matches to the trio of Djokovic, Nadal and Federer. His time was due, since he not only surpassed Roger in the rankings, but also beat Novak and Rafa for the first time on his way to the title.

The Royal Oak Offshore Diver and the Royal Oak Offshore Chronograph weren't the only Audemars Piguet timepieces he sported at the Australian Open; in press conferences he showed the sporty elegance of the Royal Oak Chronograph on a metal bracelet and that was his choice to pose with the trophy in the photo session held in Melbourne the day after the most significant achievement of his career. To date.

New RM 35-01 for Rafa

Rafael Nadal didn't win the title, but he will have yet another Richard Mille timepiece under his name, though he'll keep on playing with the RM 27-01 Tourbillon. Unveiled recently at the Salon International de la Haute Horlogerie, the RM 35-01 (with the inscription 'Rafa' on the dial) has a carbon case manufactured using the NTPT® technology, consisting of several layers of parallel filaments of carbon of a thickness of 30 microns, providing exceptional rigidity and unique aesthetics through the undulating shapes and random visual identity. The Calibre RMUL3 powering the RM 35-01 is a skeleton manual winding 4-gram (!) movement with hours, minutes, & seconds, providing exceptional resistance to impacts through the use of titanium grade 5 black PVD throughout the movement, as proven in extensive testing under extreme conditions and 5000 G impacts.

But there were more watch tales at the Australian Open. Serena Williams showed up playing with the ladies' version of the Royal Oak Offshore Chronograph that was presented to her during the Art Basel event organized by Audemars Piguet in Miami last December - and though the world number one lost in the fourth round to Rolex's Ana Ivanovic, she won another kind of prize: the most frequently asked question related to watches on the internet; everyone wanted to know which timepiece Williams was wearing!

Clairvoyant timekeeper

As official timekeeper of the Australian Open, Rolex had a good tournament: ambassador Li Na won the women's title and projected even further the fame of the brand in China, whereas global icon Roger Federer made it back to the semifinals of a Grand Slam for the first time in a year. But a strange episode surfaced in the middle of the tournament: the Rolex ad in the official website of the Australian Open precociously congratulated ambassador Jo-Wilfried Tsonga for winning the title (he ended up losing to Federer in the 4th round) and, when the error was discovered, it was replaced by another premature ad congratulating Li Na for the win. At least they got that one right!

Finally, besides Rafael Nadal getting a time violation in the final for taking too long between points in spite of wearing a 625,000 euro timepiece, the most awkward moment of the Australian Open related to watches occurred in the press conference following the first semifinal. Knowing Tomas Berdych is a great aficionado, an intrepid reporter - not me! - used an analogy to ask him whether his performance at the tournament deserved a (self) reward: "You used to buy watches every time you had a big result here. Is this a watch-worthy tournament, making the semifinals?"; the big Czech didn't like it: "This is really not part of a press conference right after the match. I have other feelings going through my mind and you come with a question like that. Really, I don't know what to say about it".

The next Grand Slam tournament will take place in Paris between May and June with Longines as the official timekeeper: Roland Garros.