Zinski’s passion for watches extends beyond aesthetic design. He also runs a watch repair shop, with a dedicated section on the Typsim website, and ensures his creations ship out in top working order.
Though the Sellita movements don’t come with a COSC chronometer certification, which watch brands can opt for at an added expense, Typsim regulates each one to -2/+2 seconds per day.
As if all that wasn’t enough to ensnare every vintage dive watch fan, the 100M comes on a NATO strap from Phoenix, the UK-based manufacturer who famously supplies the Ministry of Defense.

With the amount of historically accurate detailing that went into the 100M, not to mention the impeccable movement powering it, it is a wonder that it is priced under $1,000.
This is as close to landing a mint condition 1960s skin diver as you can get a once-in-a-lifetime attic find or inventing a time machine.
