The original Seiko Astron was one of the most impactful watches ever made, as its release on Christmas Day in 1969 marked the beginning of the quartz era and forever changed watchmaking.
Today, the Astron name lives on at Seiko as the brand’s most technologically advanced line of quartz-powered timekeepers, ranking as the world’s first GPS solar watches — i.e., their movements are both solar-powered and constantly communicate with satellites to automatically adjust to always-correct atomic time.
For its latest Astron GPS Solar models, Seiko looked to the heavens — literally — and crafted a pair of super watches with dials inspired by spiral galaxies.
Starry night

Seiko has dubbed its new Astron GPS Solar watches “Starry Sky” after their spiral galaxy inspiration. The new pattern, which Seiko created for these two new references — SSJ039 and SSH187 — features an embossed, swirling pattern emanating from the center of the dial. The pattern has a guilloché-like texture on its undulating waves, as well as a dark-turquiose background infused with glitter to represent sparkling stars.
It’s a complex and somewhat busy dial pattern, but its outer space-theme is a perfect match for the satellite tech inside the watches. These models are technically communicating with extraterrestrial objects, so why shouldn’t they look like they came from space?





