Editorial
The Sharp Edged is Seiko proving it can compete on design, not just value. Every surface is cut at deliberate angles, referencing the ceramic knife-making tradition of Seki City, and the result is a dress watch that reads as modern without chasing trends. At 39.3mm it fits a broad range of wrists and stays clearly within dress-watch proportions.
Seiko launched the Sharp Edged series in 2020 as part of the Presage line's push into design-forward territory. The angular case aesthetic draws directly from the ceramic blade-making craft of Seki City, a city with centuries of Japanese cutlery and knife heritage. The SPB169J1 carries a white sunburst dial with blue accents, and the companion SPB171J1 offers a deep blue dial , both dial options accentuate the angular case geometry through how light catches and shifts across the faceted surfaces.
The J1 suffix designates Japanese domestic market production, which matters to some collectors but does not affect quality or serviceability. This was Seiko's clearest statement that the Presage line was capable of something more than Grand Seiko's budget sibling.
The case finishing is where this watch earns or loses you , the edges need to be crisp on a well-made example, and worn or uneven facets are a red flag on any used piece. The dial printing and applied indices are delicate; inspect closely under a loupe because chips or print flaws on the sunburst finish are more visible than on a matte dial. The J1 designation means it was originally sold in Japan, so grey-market pricing can vary significantly and warranty support outside Japan is not guaranteed.
Strap lug width is 20mm but the angular lug shape means some third-party straps sit awkwardly , factor in the cost of a good fitting strap when budgeting. Fakes exist in the Presage line; verify the serial number format and check the case back engraving against known examples.