





Rolex Oyster Perpetual 6581 Gilt OCC Dial
The Rolex Oyster Perpetual collection was officially introduced in 1931, marking a pivotal moment in watchmaking history. It debuted the revolutionary Rolex Perpetual movement — a self-winding mechanism that harnesses the natural motion of the wearer’s wrist to power the watch. This innovation eliminated the need for manual winding, delivering a new level of everyday convenience and reliability.
Paired with Rolex’s iconic Oyster case, first launched in 1926 as the world’s first waterproof watch case, the Perpetual movement formed a truly groundbreaking combination. The result was the Oyster Perpetual: a timepiece defined by durability, precision, and practicality. With its self-winding movement and robust waterproof construction, it quickly established itself as the ideal everyday watch and further cemented Rolex’s status as a pioneer of horological innovation.
This mid-1950s reference 6581 is executed in a lovely 34mm case with a steel engine-turned bezel. The dial variations on these have become a collecting world in themselves — from Explorer-style dials to black and white honeycomb versions.
At hand, we have a high-gloss gilt dial with elegant markers, a “Swiss Only” designation at six o’clock, and a rare silver-printed “Officially Certified Chronometer” inscription on the lower half of the dial, topped off with dauphine hands and mustard-colored lume plots.
The watch is paired with a Bulang & Sons straight end-link bracelet — a super-cool combination, in our view — and has been fully serviced by our watchmaker.
A true mid-century classic — inquire now to make this rare gilt-dial 6581 yours.
Specifications:
- Rolex Reference 6581 Oyster Perpetual
- 34mm steel case
- Steel engine-turned bezel
- Black gilt dial, OCC writing, signed “Swiss Only,” and dauphine hands
- Serial 466xx dating to 1954
- Steel Bulang & Sons straight end-link bracelet
- Fully serviced by our watchmaker
- One-year mechanical warranty
- Free worldwide FedEx Priority shipping
Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
The Rolex Oyster Perpetual collection was officially introduced in 1931, marking a pivotal moment in watchmaking history. It debuted the revolutionary Rolex Perpetual movement — a self-winding mechanism that harnesses the natural motion of the wearer’s wrist to power the watch. This innovation eliminated the need for manual winding, delivering a new level of everyday convenience and reliability.
Paired with Rolex’s iconic Oyster case, first launched in 1926 as the world’s first waterproof watch case, the Perpetual movement formed a truly groundbreaking combination. The result was the Oyster Perpetual: a timepiece defined by durability, precision, and practicality. With its self-winding movement and robust waterproof construction, it quickly established itself as the ideal everyday watch and further cemented Rolex’s status as a pioneer of horological innovation.
This mid-1950s reference 6581 is executed in a lovely 34mm case with a steel engine-turned bezel. The dial variations on these have become a collecting world in themselves — from Explorer-style dials to black and white honeycomb versions.
At hand, we have a high-gloss gilt dial with elegant markers, a “Swiss Only” designation at six o’clock, and a rare silver-printed “Officially Certified Chronometer” inscription on the lower half of the dial, topped off with dauphine hands and mustard-colored lume plots.
The watch is paired with a Bulang & Sons straight end-link bracelet — a super-cool combination, in our view — and has been fully serviced by our watchmaker.
A true mid-century classic — inquire now to make this rare gilt-dial 6581 yours.
Specifications:
- Rolex Reference 6581 Oyster Perpetual
- 34mm steel case
- Steel engine-turned bezel
- Black gilt dial, OCC writing, signed “Swiss Only,” and dauphine hands
- Serial 466xx dating to 1954
- Steel Bulang & Sons straight end-link bracelet
- Fully serviced by our watchmaker
- One-year mechanical warranty
- Free worldwide FedEx Priority shipping























