Editorial
The Bulgari Bulgari is one of the few watches where the design brief came from jewelry, not watchmaking. The bezel engraved with the brand name twice is a direct lift from Bvlgari's Roman coin and cameo work, and at 41mm it wears with more authority than the smaller historical sizes without losing the coin-edge elegance. The 2017 in-house BVL 191 movement brought this long-running design into genuine collector territory.
Bvlgari introduced the Bulgari Bulgari in 1977, designed by Gerald Genta, though the repeating-name bezel treatment was Bvlgari's own concept rooted in their Via Condotti jewelry aesthetic. Early references used ETA-based movements and the line stayed largely unchanged for decades, which is why the 2017 in-house BVL 191 caliber was a meaningful upgrade rather than a cosmetic refresh. The 102676 is the current-production steel automatic at 41mm, with 42 hours of power reserve and a date complication at 3 o'clock.
Bvlgari has expanded the BB family considerably since the relaunch, including ultra-thin variants and precious metal versions, but the steel automatic at this diameter remains the most accessible and wearable entry point.
Earlier Bulgari Bulgari references on the secondary market carry ETA movements, which are fine but not the same proposition as the in-house BVL 191. Verify the movement generation before buying: the in-house caliber was introduced in 2017, so anything produced before that will be ETA-powered regardless of how it is described. The date window at 3 o'clock is slightly awkward visually given the bezel inscription, and some buyers find it disrupts the symmetry.
Water resistance is rated at 50 meters, which covers everyday wear but rules out swimming or diving. Dial color consistency can vary across production runs in the matte versions, so inspect photos carefully when buying remotely.