Did you know that the very first (legal) televised advertisement, aired on July 1, 1941, was for Bulova watches? It’s true. In fact, the historic brand dates back even further, to 1875, and now has its headquarters in the iconic Empire State Building in NYC.
The point is, the brand is an intrinsic part of both watchmaking and American history.
One of its latest watch releases, the Bulova Military Chronograph Veterans Watchmaker Initiative (VWI) Edition, only furthers that connection with its military heritage and charitable aim.

Field watch, chronograph complication
Although not unheard of, this watch is a somewhat unusual take on a chronograph — at least as far as current trends are concerned. While it retains a classic three-subdial face, you might notice a pretty significant omission: it has no tachymeter bezel.
Present on motorsport-inspired chronographs, these bezels are designed to help measure speed. But this watch isn’t motorsport-inspired. Rather, it’s a classic military timepiece: a field watch (or a field chrono). In practice, this watch is made to track distance, rather than speed, as its use would traditionally be for on-foot fieldwork.





