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Showing posts with label handbags. Show all posts
Showing posts with label handbags. Show all posts

Monday, 18 February 2013

Counterfeit Fashion Goods Are On The Rise, Thanks To Pressured Wallets And Fast Fashion


According to a recent report by Charlie Thomas of the Huffingtonpost (14/02/13) who reported, pressures on our wallets has led to 22% of shoppers knowingly buying fake fashion goods, forcing genuine luxury retailers to lose out.
The research from online second-hand luxury goods retailer Vestiaire Collective also found just 34% said they knew for sure they have never purchased fake fashion.
Mock 'designer' handbags were the most sought after item, with 31% of those who admitted buying counterfeit items saying they had picked up some replica arm candy. Sunglasses and watches were close behind on 24% each.

Of those who bought fake fashion items, 20% said the designer price tag was the main reason why they didn't buy the real thing. Another 17% claimed to have been duped, thinking they had bought a genuine item but later realising it was false.
Unsurprisingly, it was the younger generations who were more likely to buy counterfeits - those aged 25-34 racked up nearly a quarter of fake-fanciers.
Counterfeit Louis Vuitton
The issue is a major problem for luxury brands - Gregor Jackson, partner at luxury brand consultancy gpstudio, told the Huffington Post UK the value of black market luxury goods accounted for around 10% of the value of legitimate goods.
"For many, focusing 'beyond the product' and delivering a complete retail and service experience has been the key – selling more than a product, selling a whole experience that can't be faked," he said.
"We've also seen brands focus on the way that their products are made to communicate the value they deliver – for example Tiffany's taking its customers behind the scenes through their social media. Others have made products harder to counterfeit – for example by using specific materials or creating limited editions."
Are fast fashion and mass manufacturing to blame?
Jaana Jatyri, founder of trend forecaster Trendstop.com, told the HuffPost UK the rise in fake fashion items had been intensified by the buy now, throw away tomorrow attitude of fast fashion.
"Fast-paced fashion trends result in a consumption cycle where looks are 'only for a season', and people would rather pay as little as possible on a given item to be able to change their look frequently," she said.

"Most people wouldn't be able to easily afford designer prices, and most simply don't care if their bag is plastic. Luxury is aspirational, it was never meant to be purchased by everyone. With the media portraying designer looks as 'must-haves', the rise of a counterfeit industry is an inevitable consequence."
The mass manufacturing techniques adopted in countries like China had also made producing good-looking fakes easier, with better quality fakes hitting the high street at seriously competitive prices.
Counterfeit Hermès Birkin
"Luxury items manufactured in the same Chinese factories as mass market items to increase margins, certainly adds another layer to this story. Many luxury brands consider counterfeiting a form of viral marketing," said Jatyri.


One homegrown luxury brand that has felt the impact of counterfeit goods is the UK's Cambridge Satchel Company. Founder Julie Dean set up her iconic bag business with just £600, and now her goods are sold all over the world.


"The Cambridge Satchel Company goes to great lengths to keep all its manufacturing in the UK, to keep their bags affordable and to fight counterfeiting and brand confusion which errods businesses and support unethical practices," she told HuffPost UK.


The Cambridge Satchel Company
"The film industry has attacked piracy with intention- it's time that fashion does the same."
The rise in websites claiming to offer "discount" or "cheap" luxe goods has been one of the key drivers behind the fakes market; groups such as Mark Monitor, an online brand protection firm are leading the fight back to prohibit companies producing counterfeits, infringing copyright and cybersquatting on lucrative domain names.
Since MarkMonitor began working with Cambridge Satchel, the company has detected and carried out enforcement for more than 1,000 counterfeit product listings on exchange sites, with some listings advertising the availability of thousands of units.
The brand protection programme has detected 29 e-commerce sites selling counterfeits and 76 sites cybersquatting on the Cambridge Satchel's brand by using the brand in the domain name.
Counterfeit Hermès Birkin
Sarah Bush, UK marketing director at Vestiaire Collective said while some people are complacent about buying ‘fake fashion’, consumers should care that the items don't match the real thing in terms of quality and craftsmanship.
"With a designer item you are investing in something which will look great and last for years to come," she said.
"Instead of buying fake items, we encourage anyone who is set on picking up a designer item to buy authenticated pre-owned fashion. Pre-owned is an affordable way to experience real luxury items, and you can even resell items at a later date.”
How to spot a fake - via HuffingtonPost

Vestiaire Collective's counterfeit spotting team supplied HuffPost UK with their top tips for spotting fakes:
  • Only look at reputable websites. Shop at recognisable sites - all of your well-known favourites - for straight discounts. Don't be tempted to shop sites you are unfamiliar with, especially those with 'discount' or 'cheap' in the URL.
  • Familiarise yourself with your favourite brands. Don't be shy to check out items at a brand's shop or concession in a department store. Inspect the item carefully and you'll have better instincts as to what may not be right with a product.
  • Look at the hardware. On items such as handbags, the zipper should move smoothly and the pull should be heavy in feel. All other hardware should be similarly heavy and not hollow. There shouldn't be any discolouring or signs of the metal flaking off.
  • Check the handles and look inside. The stitching should be in a straight line and the thread should be strong and not frayed or pulled. The leather should be smooth and match the bag in the way it does on the product you saw in the store. The same is true inside; if the fabric looks strange or exceedingly cheap, it's likely a fake.
  • Logo. If the logo on a handbag, shoe or garment is upside down, sideways, cut off or somehow not right, again, you are likely looking at a fraudulent product.

Content credit: HuffingtonPost Uk
Pic credit: Delortae Agency

For luxury authentic products and services; http://www.luxuryonlinestore.net


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Wednesday, 2 January 2013

Designer Bag Counterfeit Operation Closed




THE US and Chinese governments joined forces to close down a designer handbag counterfeit operation worth $802 million (£503 million). The China-based illegal businesses involved 37 websites producing fake replica versions of Louis Vuitton, Coach and Hermès bags. In total, 73 people have been arrested.

China's Ministry of Public Security revealed that 20,000 counterfeit handbags were seized, as were machinery and enough raw materials to create a further 50,000 items, WWD reports. The operation that led to these arrests and confiscations was led by Jun Qian, who claimed that he personally started creating forged goods when his own leather business suffered during the 2009 recession.

For luxury authentic products & services; http://www.luxuryonlinestore.net



Monday, 19 November 2012

73 held in crackdown on counterfeit luxury goods ring

Counterfeit bags on sale in market 

Reporting on our sources, By Ni Yinbin (Shanghai Daily) THOUSANDS of fake luxury products have been confiscated and 73 suspects detained in southern China in a crackdown on what police say was a major source of counterfeit goods. 

More than 20,000 bags and suitcases purporting to be famous brands such as Louis Vuitton, Hermes and Coach were confiscated in the suspects' hideouts along with 17 manufacturing machines, 91 bank cards and deposit books, the Ministry of Public Security said.

Investigators said that more than 960,000 fake bags of various brands had been manufactured by the ring and many of them had been exported to the United States and the Middle East.

They estimated the value of the infringement of intellectual property rights case to be 5 billion yuan (US$802 million).


In January this year, police received information that the suspects, led by a man surnamed Qian, were making fake Louis Vuitton and Coach bags in Guangzhou, capital of Guangdong Province, and exporting them to countries including the United States. 
Police launched an investigation and contacted US Immigration and Customs Enforcement for their help.

Throughout the next few months, police in Guangdong, Fujian and Anhui provinces mapped the gang's manufacturing, storing, transport and export network with the cooperation of the US authorities. 

Police launched a raid to capture Qian and his accomplices as they tried to smuggle another batch of fake bags to the US.

Police said that in 2010 Qian rented several stores in Guangzhou to handle orders and set up more than 10 hideouts for the manufacture of fake bags and other leather items and accessories. 

The gang then smuggled the fake products to the US and the Middle East with the help of overseas clients, police said.

Qian and the gang are said to have made huge profits from the business.

They had even managed to buy more than 33,000 square meters of land in Anhui Province where they were planning to build a factory, police said.

For authentic luxury products & services; http://www.luxuryonlinestore.net

Sunday, 28 October 2012

Hermès employees found to be in on counterfeit ring

French police have dismantled an international crime ring which produced copies of the luxury fashion house's bags, with several Hermès staff in on the act.


A dozen people were arrested by French police last Thursday as part of the dismantling of an international crime ring which produced fake Hermès bags. Two Hermès employees have been dismissed as a result of the probe, according to WWD back in June of this year, but the luxury goods company believes that current members of staff could also be involved.

It has come as no surprise to Delortae Agency, who have noticed a sharp increase in our own person inspection of an increasingly new breed of sophisticated counterfeits from the iconic brand house.





Starting prices for two of the brand's most iconic bags, the Kelly and the Birkin, start in the several thousand of pounds bracket and are often subject to lengthy waiting lists. Lindsey Lohan, Kim Kardashian and Victoria Beckham are celebrity collectors of the brand.


Police discovered a workshop filled with precious leather skins and estimated that one branch operated by the ring contained sales worth around €18 million (£14.5 million).

"This operation concludes a one-year investigation following an Hermès complaint based on clues and abnormal behaviour identified through the house's internal monitoring systems," Hermès said in a statement.

The bust follows a ruling in April in which the Hermès was awarded approximately £63 million after winning their case against 34 counterfeit websites.

Hermès chief executive officer Patrick Thomas recently estimated that eighty per cent of objects sold on the internet under the Hermès name are fakes, a statistic he branded "an absolute disgrace".


For luxury authentic products and services http://www.luxuryonlinestore.net

Saturday, 7 July 2012

The Comité Colbert launches new anti-counterfeiting campaign

New campaign slogan
Yes, you read correctly. According the recently released Press Notice from COMITÉ COLBERÍÈQQ    Press release May 30, 2012.


Following on from Delortae Agency earlier blog post French Luxury Brands Fighting back against Counterfeits The Comité Colbert launches new anti-counterfeiting campaign to add a little more luxury muscle to the campaign to support luxury counterfeiting. Do we love it? Yes we do.


Buy a fake Cartier, get a genuine criminal record” “With this phone, you better be ready to call your lawyer! “Real ladies don ’t like fake” “Are you ready to unravel this one? “A bet on the wrong horse can be very expensive” “Counteifeits are no bed of roses” “Lucky charm? Unlucky at customs”.


Seven new tag lines were launched by the chairmen of companies belonging to the Comité Colbert, known to use humour as a way to get travellers’ attention. Ten thousand posters will be displayed in French airports, courtesy of French Customs as well as to partnerships developed by the Comité Colbert with the French airport authority, Air France and the urban furniture specialist J.C. Decaux.


Longchamp and Van Cleef & Arpels have joined ranks with Cartier, Chanel, Christian Dior, Lacoste and Louis Vuitton, involved for years in this initiative conducted under the auspices of the French national anti­counterfeiting committee (CNAC). And the initiative has proven effective: Consumers in France are more aware than those in
other EU countries that common European laws exist to protect intellectual property rights (84% of respondents in France, which ranked first among EU countries, according to a Eurobarometer survey in 2009).




Given the magnitude of trafficking, the Comité Colbert continues to give top priority to the
fight against counterfeiting. In France, the number of knock­offs seized by Customs went from 200,000 in 1994 to 8.9 million in 201 l. It is estimated that counterfeiting costs the French economy between 30,000 and 40,000 jobs a year and 6 billion euros in losses. The number of counterfeit products sold online and seized by Customs has grown exponentially, increasing by a factor of nearly 20 in five years.
“The protection of intellectual properly rights makes it possible to grow competitive French businesses and safeguard French jobs. The combat of the Comite’ Colbert, which is of long date, illustrates the luxury sector’s commitment to the fight against counterfeiting to protect our know-how ana’ creation,” declares Elisabeth Ponsolle des Portes, President and CEO of the Comité Colbert.
The campaign has been taken up elsewhere in Europe: the Customs administrations in six other EU countries have adopted it to raise awareness among their citizens. There are now local language versions in Croatia, Hungary, Italy, Romania, the Czech Republic and Slovakia.
For luxury authentic products & services, visit http://www.luxuryonlinestore.net

Wednesday, 11 January 2012

Louis Vuitton Sues San Antonio Flea Market


Louis Vuitton HQ

Opening arguments began this week in a lawsuit filed by luxury fashion brand Louis Vuitton against San Antonio’s Eisenhauer flea market. The French company says the flea market allowed vendors to sell counterfeit products and is seeking $18 million.
Louis Vuitton’s lawyer said in opening arguments that the company sent representatives to the Eisenhauer Market and found as many as 15 vendors selling fake Louis Vuitton products, the San Antonio Express-News reports.
A lawyer for the market said its on-site manager was not trained to recognized counterfeit items.
A statement issued by Louis Vuitton last year and posted on San Antonio NBC affiliate WOAI’s website says the company has been fighting counterfeiting around the world for years.

The Eisenhauer flea market in San Antonio
Photo by Jon Mallard http://www.flickr.com/photos/mallard10/

“Thanks to this fully-dedicated team of lawyers and former law enforcement professionals based in Paris with regional offices in Tokyo, Hong Kong, Guangzhou, Shanghai, Milan, Dubai, New York and Buenos Aires, thousands of anti-counterfeiting raids are performed each year,” the company says in the statement.
The lawsuit was originally filed in February 2011. A commenter on the blog Strange in San Antonio said he had purchased a fake bag from the market, and the quality was questionable.
“The stitching started to let go after a few months and it ended up looking pretty ratty after a year,” Keith Allen K posted.
Louis Vuitton is also embroiled in a legal dispute with Warner Brothers over the appearance of fake handbags in the movie Hangover Part II, see Delortae Agency's according MiMi's Blog.
And just last week in Orlando, police arrested a couple and accused them of selling counterfeit Louis Vuitton bags at a flea market, along with other fake designer brands, the Orlando Sentinel reported. 
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Monday, 5 September 2011

Exclusive! Counterfeit Website reveal exactly how they make the perfect fake!


Exclusive! We have access, word-for-word how one counterfeit online seller, create the perfect fake!

It is no secret that Delortae Agency is committed to brand protection, designers copyright and trademark infringement. Our Authentication Service is recommended by Major Brand Houses, PayPal, law enforcement, Trading Standards, Office of Fair Trading, small claim courts, respected auction houses, insurance and credit card companies.

We have blocked out the site details (though on file) as we do not want to publicize their illegal activity further but answers the question how fakes are getting more sophisticated. This is taken from the actual transcript, here it is;


We are Shanghai XXXX the high replica products company.We apply ourselves to providing you with the very best quality replica handbags, knock off purses, leather wallets and designer totes. We are proud to be the best online replica handbags shop in the world.

Our website is 
http://www.XXXXX.co.cc is one of the biggest online commercial corporations in Asia, committing itself to build a worldwide wholesale&retail shop online. Our company was originally set up in Shanghai, China in 2004, aiming to operate the b2c or b2b transactions with overseas consumers.

All pictures on our website are of the exact products you will receive  We have been purchasing original designer handbags, and shipping them to our factories in Italy, France and Asia. We then inspect every nook and cranny and purchase the same materials to ensure that the products we manufacture are virtually indistinguishable from the designer originals in every way.
 

All pictures on our website are of the exact products you will receive. We know that you want to know exactly what you are going to get when you place an order, so we have our photographer take pictures of every new product before it is put up for sale on our website.

Customer satisfaction is important to our business. We know that people who lovedesigner handbags always want the newest and hottest styles on the market. Often, we get our hands on new items even before they are released to the public. Then we begin the process of finding the materials, and creating the finest replicas available anywhere. Our customers are usually amazed that products that they can't find anywhere else are available on our website, and that the quality is of the best. That is why 65% of our business comes from repeat customers.

Every bag we made is 95% exact like the original.  Replica handbags are shipped to you directly from our warehouse in Asia. Our staff oversees the production of each replica handbag to ensure quality and customer satisfaction. This means you get the best selection of replica designer handbags at the lowest price. We care about you so we take care in the selection of your handbag and we respond to all questions or comments on the next business day.

We will keep in touch with you. We have e-mail agents on standby to answer any questions you might have, as well as to keep our customers informed on the latest specials and newest items. We add items to our site regularly, so be sure to sign up for our newsletter. As a LightintheBags subscriber, you will be privy to the latest trends in the designer handbag world, and receive discounts on selected items available on our website.

We guarantee that you will receive your designer replica bags promptly and intact without any hassles from the courier or customs agents. All of our customers are provided with a tracking number and access to our customer service via emai. If for any reason you are unsatisfied with your designer replica simply email or give us a call and we will address the problem.

Our website is http://www.XXXXX.co.cc


The assurances of "without any hassles from the courier or customs agents" hints that this is an highly organized operation, that maybe also paying off certain authorities to 'turn a blind eye', only shows further what lengths these companies will go to, in order to bring us the perfect fake.


Sunday, 4 September 2011

Fendi Waging the War Against Counterfeiters with sophisticated Holograms

In our role of independent luxury designer authentication and appraisal specialist, we view some of worlds most sophisticated counterfeit items ever made. These items, most everyday consumers never get exposed to, but due to the counterfeit market opening up and the ease of obtaining such materials and new countries entering into this lucrative arena.

We are aware that these items are filtering through to the general domain. It is no secret that Delortae Agency is committed to brand protection, designers copyright and trademark infringement. Our Authentication Service is recommended by Major Brand Houses, PayPal, law enforcement, Trading Standards, Office of Fair Trading, small claim courts, respected auction houses, insurance and credit card companies.

Over the last five years we have seen a growing number of more sophisticated counterfeits being presented. A worrying trend that has not been overlooked by the major brand designers who are victims of this new wave of sophisticated counterfeiters.

We are all too familiar in the industry, what lengths major brand houses will go to in order to protect their product and the consumer against counterfeiters. We have seen straight stitching, angled stitching, alligator skins not to mention gold zippers to help us set apart the authentic from the counterfeit, now the house of Fendi are introducing holograms.

Nothing new about that. Holograms have been used for years to in the war to combat counterfeit activity to identify authenticity of many luxury goods much of the appeal due to holograms being hard, not to mention expensive, to copy. Holograms are known to use machinery that uses create patterns using laser various different laser beams. These holograms invariably incorporate images, numbers and bar codes that are visible under forensic equipment.

The Italian fashion house Fendi, a unit of LVMH Louis Vuitton Moet Hennessey, the worlds largest luxury goods group, have been for some time stitching holograms into the lining of their bags, suits, scarves, boots not to mention mink coats. No one has used holograms quite like Fendi are doing.

The coloured, rectangular stamps with encrypted codes, are visible only with a special magnifying device. The devices are being made available to the Police and Custom Officials to help identify a Fendi branded authentic item from a counterfeit. The holograms also have a wireless tracking device embedded into them which allow Fendi to track if a product has gone a stray from the strictly controlled distribution network or sold in an unauthorized store as the tags are deactivated once an item has been sold.

Michael Burke, Chief Executive of Fendi says "The best way to fight is to stay ahead" also added "We want the certainty of quickly determine whether an item is fake" their familiar two mirroring 'F's in brown and black, is one of the most copied labels in the world.

French fashion house Louis Vuitton have also acknowledged copies of their handbags are so good that their customers only realise their purchase is counterfeit when taken to a boutique for repair. We also only repair authentic luxury items in our own Luxury Handbag SPA and have seen an increase in our own returns of restoration items that have been presented to our Technicians Studio.

Fendi is not the only luxury goods company using holograms. Gucci Group, owners of Gucci, Bottega Veneta and Yves Saint Laurent, confirms it also uses similar technology to protect its brands.


It costs approximately 15,000 Euro to create a holograms encrypted image with an additional few euros tagged on to the actual product. For major brands that represents one Euro out of a thousand but for counterfeiters it is one Euro out of ten says Marc-Antoine Jamet, General Secretary of LVMH and serving Head of France's Union des Fabricants, known for lobbying anti counterfeit measures.

No longer can luxury goods company rely on their exemplary craftmanship, quality skins and ahead-of-their-times designs to ensure authenticity. The luxury goods industry is notoriously reserved when it comes to talking about their anti theft protection. An industry, that up until recently, have only admitted publicly they even have a counterfeit problem.

Police in Naples have already reportedly uncovered a warehouse with photocopiers used to create fake holograms with the basic design without the deep colours and multidimensional images, for counterfeit handbags. A Fendi spokesperson said they have already seen a counterfeit Fendi complete with hologram.

So even luxury goods executives admit holograms are not fool proof. "Holograms are better than nothing but they are already being copied," says Claudio di Sabato Head of Security at Italian fashion house Prada Group NV.

Luxury goods experts say the holograms should allow consumers who buy for secondary retailers or pre owned used goods stores to know whether the product is authentic. But what if the consumer does not know how the authentic hologram or product should look, it would appear holograms offers no protection whatsoever.

Having said that Fendi hope the added complexity of it's holograms and the fact the Police and Custom Officials can root out fakes more efficiently will provide an extra deterrent against counterfeiting. The technology is considered so valuable at Fendi that only two people at its fashion house know the code behind the encrypted holograms.

Exclusive! Counterfeit Website reveal exactly how they make the perfect fake! Word-for-word, how the perfect fake is actually made! HERE

Is this the way forward?