

Information on Westfields can be found at Westfield by Bulova. Please note that Westfields and Caravelles, which were made by Bulova, have their own signature parameters, which are not covered in this discussion. It is important to be familiar with the information contained in that page, as anything outside of those specified parameters should be carefully considered. A detailed description of Bulova case signatures, as well as the signatures of other case makers that Bulova used, can be found at Bulova Case Signatures.


The case signature can take one of many forms, but it will, with very few exeptions, include "Bulova" somewhere on the case.The vast majority of Bulova made watches will bear some form of "Bulova" on the movement. We do see some examples of Rubaiyat models with movements signed "Rubaiyat Watch Co.", but that is a single example of a non-Bulova signed movement, and it is quite rare. That one exception is a very early line of watches-perhaps Bulova's very first line-called the "Rubaiyat". With only one known exception, a Bulova watch should be signed "Bulova" in one form or another. Co." (pre-May 1923) or "Bulova Watch Co", or, in very early and very late models, simply "Bulova". The movement should be signed "Bulova W.There are many examples of these non-Bulova watches, sold as genuine Bulovas, on popular auction sites.Įxample 1: The word "Movement" on the dial indicates a watch that was not made by Bulova

The movement was in fact made by Bulova, but nothing else about the watch was. Here's an example of a watch with "Movement" on the dial. Such verbiage is an announcement that the only thing genuinely Bulova about the watch is the movement-the dial and case were made my someone else. The dial should not read "Movement" under the "Bulova" signature.From the early 1920s to today, a Bulova watch will have a Bulova signed dial. There may be instances in very early watches-such as those that apparently date to pre-1920-where the dial is not signed, but those rare examples are the only instances where a Bulova dial does not read "Bulova". The dial must be signed "Bulova", or, if an Accutron, "Accutron" or "Bulova Accutron" (or Accuquartz).(Note, however, that some watches made in the late 1970s-such as LEDs, LCDs, and quartz models-may not have the Bulova signature on the movement, and they may not have a traditional dial, but those instances are limited and obvious.) Any watch missing one of those three key signatures should be viewed with suspicion. Part of that litmus test is that the case, movement, and dial must bear one of the signatures known to have been used by Bulova, as explained in the bullets that follow. The first step in identifying a Bulova watch is to ensure that the watch is a legitimate, genuine Bulova. Determining the Authenticity and Identity of a Bulova Watch
