The seconds hand is in the same lime green from the rehaut, as is the HUF logo that appears above 6 o’clock. The hands and applied indices are all filled with vintage-style lume, reminding you that this general design originated in the mid-century.
Flip the watch over, and you’ll see the Seiko Cal. 4R36 through an exhibition caseback. That’s par for the course for the modern-day Seiko 5 Sports, but for this model, the display window has been tinted to HUF’s shade of green and additionally features a HUF logo at its center.
Pricing and Availability
Outside of the new colors and HUF logos, this is more or less your standard Seiko 5 Sports. You’re getting a 42.5mm stainless steel case with a matching three-link bracelet, a day-date window at 3 o’clock and a crown at 4 o’clock — though the latter is now signed with the HUF logo.
Seiko is referring to this collab as a limited edition, but they’re actually producing 7,000 of them. That is a lot of watches — plenty of well-known brands don’t even produce that many watches in a given year — so this might just be the least-limited limited-edition watch ever made. In any case, Seiko is still numbering each one on the caseback from 1 to 7,000.