Actor Jacob Elordi spotted wearing a Omega

On the cover of Man About Town magazine, actor Jacob Elordi poses alongside a stone fountain statue, his left wrist carrying what is unmistakably the Omega Seamaster Diver 300M 'No Time To Die' edition — the watch Omega developed in close collaboration with the production of the twenty-fifth James Bond film. Photographed by his sister Isabella Elordi, the shot captures the watch in strong natural light, making its distinctive steel mesh NATO bracelet and blue sunray dial clearly legible.
The Omega Seamaster Diver 300M 'No Time To Die' (reference 210.92.42.20.01.001) departs from the standard Seamaster 300M formula in several meaningful ways. The 42mm case is crafted from Grade 2 titanium — lighter and more corrosion-resistant than steel — and the dial presents a deep fumé blue with a vintage-style minute track and applied indexes. The most visually arresting departure is the stainless steel NATO mesh bracelet, a deliberate callback to the 1957 Seamaster 300 worn by early Bond actors and a design that Omega's archive team researched extensively for the film. Inside sits the Omega Co-Axial Master Chronometer Calibre 8806 — no date, certified to METAS standards for magnetic resistance up to 15,000 gauss.
From a collector perspective, this reference occupies a nuanced position. It was produced in meaningful quantities — not a numbered limited edition in the strict sense — yet its film tie-in, titanium construction, and bracelet configuration set it apart from the standard 300M lineup. The NATO mesh bracelet alone became a talking point on collector forums, praised for its suppleness and period-correct look. Omega used this model as a vehicle to demonstrate what a modern interpretation of a 1950s professional diver could look like without pastiche.
Jacob Elordi, known for Euphoria, Saltburn, and Priscilla, has cultivated a public image that balances old-Hollywood physicality with considered style choices. Wearing a titanium Seamaster rather than a more obvious gold sports watch signals an awareness of horological context that reads as genuine rather than styled.
At retail, the 'No Time To Die' Seamaster was priced at approximately $6,100 USD. On the secondary market it has settled modestly above retail, reflecting healthy but not speculative demand — the mark of a watch that collectors actually wear.