Friday, December 20, 2013

Fake Carolina Herrera 4 piece gift set

This is a Fake Carolina Herrera 4 piece gift set:

Nowhere on the box or items does it say Carolina Herrera, nor is it the correct name of "CH", it simply says "GH", which could fool someone if they weren't looking carefully or if the picture is too small in the auction to make the distinction, but it has the same bottle shape and design elements of the original. Do not buy it! It is fake and is NOT genuine Carolina Herrera perfume.

It was being offered for sale by ebay seller zenshoppingca

Fake Burberry The Beat 4 piece gift set

This is a fake Burberry The Beat 4 piece gift set:

Nowhere on the box or items does it say Burberry, nor is it the correct name of "The Beat", it simply says "Beat", but it has the same bottle shape and design elements of the original. Do not buy it! It is fake and is NOT genuine Burberry perfume.

It was being offered for sale by ebay seller zenshoppingca

How to Spot A Fake Coco Mademoiselle by Chanel Perfume


This information courtesy of www.dino.co.uk, who had an interesting idea on how to destroy the fake Coco Mademoiselle bottle he received on ebay.


Take a close look at these two bottles and notice the subtle differences in the font on each one.

Just a few subtle differences in the font sizes and positioning.




Now the back is where it starts to get interesting. There are some pretty big differences in positioning and thickness of the lettering (thicker on the fake)..



The ingredients were the most obvious, with a spelling mistake, different line-breaks and completely different ingredients at times.



The scanner didn’t really do justice to the gold (which was pretty similar on both) but did manage to show the lower quality of the logo and embossing on the fake.



Again, the base was where it got a bit more obvious, but only when you have one to compare to. Fonts were different and the embossed numbers (just visible on both) were in different locations. However, on other online guides, they were both embossed just above the 116.520.



Very subtle but the flaps inside the real box were sharper then the more rounded fake. There is a subtle indent on either side of the real box lid flap too.




Now we’re getting somewhere. If you’ve had Coco Mademoiselle before, you’ll know it’s pink. The fake was yellow / brown in colour. That was the first real alarm bell. The second one was, as you’d expect, the smell. This was Eau de Parfum, i.e. the strong stuff and it just didn’t stack up. It smelt slightly of Coco Mademoiselle but didn’t last. Eau de Parfum is supposed to last for up to 8 hours. The fake lasted for about a minute or two.



The biggest giveaway on the bottle itself is the thick base and (relatively) rougher construction.





Managed to scan these on my flatbed scanner and the result clearly shows the differences. Besides the fact the fake one has a clumsy glass moulding mark compared to the refined line around the real one, the text is different. Other online guides suggest the fake can be picked off with a fingernail but this was printed on pretty solidly.





Other online guides suggest these are obvious to spot as they are made of plastic. My fake seemed to be made of glass. However, there were a few things in common with other guides. The Coco Chanel double-C logo was not very centred on the fake. It was very slightly off on the real one though. The fake stopper was a little lop-sided however. Hard to see in the photo but the square top part was slightly angled compared to the bottom part. There was also a very subtle difference on the round plastic band above the white and gold ring. The real one had small dots around it (just visible).



Other guides also mention the top not fitting well or coming off when the bottle is held by the stopper alone. Mine seemed pretty secure and led to a few “maybe it’s not a fake?” moments. However, when the real one arrived, the real stopper went on with a definite ‘click’.

There are two things to note on the spray nozzle, the color and the shape of the part inside the bottle. Some fake bottle have black nozzle inserts (the small hole that the perfume squirts out of), my fake was white… but compared to the real one was actually a more of a transparent white. The part inside the bottle (the pump) was much larger and protruded into the bottle on the fake (as seen in the photo above). Curiously, the real bottle squirted about twice as much perfume as the fake.




The gold overprinting was much cleaner and sharper on the real one. I’ve tried to get the light to show up the step in the printing where the gold is printed over the frosted logo. On the real one, the gold is exactly to the edge of the logo. In the fake, the gold covers the ridge on the outside of the logo, creating a step. Minor point but seemed in keeping with the theme of lower quality printing.


THE FIGHT AGAINST FAUX FRAGRANCES

December 9, 2009 Harper's Bazaar

THE FIGHT AGAINST FAUX FRAGRANCES

Buying a counterfeit perfume may seem harmless...until you discover what's really inside that bottle could be toxic chemicals — or worse.

By MARIA RICAPITO

"Everyone loves a bargain. So when Ann James* found her favorite perfume, Red Door by Elizabeth Arden, online at a steep discount, she was thrilled. But then her gut instinct kicked in. "I'm thinking this sounds a little too good to be true," she says. Still, she bought the Arden and a bottle of Chanel No. 5 for $14 each. "I sprayed the Red Door on," she says. "It was a little strong, not the same smell I was used to. I put it on my wrist and in my elbow crease and a little behind my ear. Later, I looked in the mirror. It looked like I was sunburnt on those areas. My skin felt extremely hot, like a welt was forming on my neck." After an emergency call to her dermatologist and a dose of prescription cortisone, she was fine — but cured of her desire to try iffy fragrances.

Every day, anticounterfeiting agents are hard at work trying to make sure others don't go through what James did. Last holiday season in New York City, as shoppers bundled against the winter weather hurried from store to store on Manhattan's Upper East Side, looking for holiday gifts, hoping for bargains, a van filled with a team of eight men and women idled just north of 86th Street. They were investigators and lawyers hired by a luxe French fragrance company that sells a tiny bottle of scent for triple-digit sums.

Around the corner, an undercover operative bought a bottle of what seemed to be this perfume from a vendor's table stacked with cello-wrapped boxes. He brought his purchase back to the van, where it was confirmed as a fake by the telltale crooked label and off-kilter bottle cap that wouldn't stay on. The team poured out of the van, quickly surrounding the vendor's table.

"We had a seizure order issued by a federal judge that allowed us to seize the goods," says lawyer Heather McDonald, a partner at Baker Hostetler in New York City who specializes in intellectual-property enforcement and was on the raid. As some investigators searched bins under the table and in a nearby van, others spoke to the man behind the table. "They say, 'Oh, we had no idea; we buy from a wholesaler' but won't say where," McDonald says. She and the rest of the team boxed up a few dozen bottles of their employer's brand and gave the seller a receipt for product seized. "We covered the entire city and made it clear to vendors that if they continue to sell this brand, we'll continue to go after them."

When customs and law enforcement get involved, counterfeiters have bigger worries. At a Newark, New Jersey, raid last year, a shipment of phony perfumes with an equivalent retail value of nearly $5 million was seized. In busts like this, the merchandise is destroyed or held to be used as evidence in court. If convicted of trademark counterfeiting, a trafficker can face up to $5 million in fines and 20 years in jail time.

As fashion counterfeiting is increasingly driven underground, fragrance is the latest front in the fight against fakes. Wasting your money on a street Goyard tote may hurt your wallet when the flimsy strap snaps, but it's unlikely to physically harm you. Counterfeit perfumes, however, suddenly seem to be everywhere — at flea markets, on street-side tables — and they can actually make you sick.

"You rarely see reactions to fragrances when they are high-end and made from high-quality ingredients such as essential oils," says Jeannette Graf, a dermatologist in Great Neck, New York. "Knockoffs are poorly made, cheap, and reactive. You don't have accountability with a knockoff. It could be made in someone's bathtub for all you know." Bad reactions, she says, range from a runny nose to redness and eczema.

Fragrance is absorbed by your body. It is a class of product that you ingest in some way," says Patrick Bamburak, director of forecasting and planning for Dior Perfumes in North America. "You want to go to a legitimate place where it should be bought." Counterfeit fragrances have not been subjected to the quality-control tests and research and development on which legitimate makers spend money and time. "When you wear a fake, the experience is a lot different," Bamburak adds. "It's either more concentrated and will be more strong or will have an alcoholy smell that won't last." And fakes have been found to contain contaminated alcohol, antifreeze, urine, and harmful bacteria.

"It's a cancer for the industry," says Emmanuel Saujet, CEO of Creed North America. And the problem is growing. Therese Randazzo, director of intellectual-property-rights policy and programs for U.S. Customs and Border Protection, says that the street value of counterfeit fragrances seized by CBP jumped from $1.2 million in 2007 to $6.7 million in 2008 — an increase of 459 percent. Rochelle Bloom, president of the Fragrance Foundation, a nonprofit educational organization, sums it up: "If you buy a fragrance off the street from a man with a box, of course the retailers lose out." Adds Randazzo, "It takes jobs from legitimate industries."

Your conscience may be another casualty. "Counterfeiters in general are tied to organized crime and illegal activity," says Randazzo. "There's more money to be made in counterfeits than in drugs — and less exposure," adds investigator Kris Buckner, founder of Investigative Consultants, a Los Angeles-based company that helps track down counterfeiters. "The consumer has to get the bigger picture that buying counterfeits supports gangs, drug dealing, guns, murders, extortion, and terrorism."

And it's not just fragrances that are under attack. If you see salon-only hair products in a drugstore or supermarket, for example, they may be counterfeit, black market, or past their expiration date. "There have been some cases where it's been pretty dangerous," says John Paul DeJoria, cofounder and CEO of Paul Mitchell, who cites phony product that was a veritable petri dish of bacteria and a spray that hurt a woman's eyes. "That's not stuff you want on your skin," he says. "And it hurts our brand if someone does get the product from a drugstore or supermarket, it's old or counterfeit, and she may not buy it again because she thinks it was not good."

The bottom line: Counterfeiters will continue to chase after profits, and legitimate companies and law enforcement will try to stop them. But consumers need to educate themselves. "Fragrance in particular is a way for many more customers to experience a slice of luxury without getting a designer bag or dress," says Bamburak. A genuine scent is safe — and special. "Buying a fake undermines the purpose of why you get a product like that." And in this uncertain world, you may find you need the real thing now more than ever.

HOW TO SPOT A FAKE SCENT

TAKE A CLOSER LOOK. If the liquid looks too pale, it could be an alcohol-heavy phony. If it's too dark, it could consist of impure or faux ingredients.

BE A LABEL CONNOISSEUR. If the label is off-kilter, smudged, poorly printed, or misspelled, it's not legit. If the bar code or an identifying mark looks sketchy, it could be a phony.

BUY RIGHT. Top-quality perfumes are sold at department stores, beauty specialty stores such as Sephora, and sometimes high-end boutique pharmacies and apothecaries.

DON'T BE FOOLED. Real fragrances are not sold on tables in tourist hot spots or at flea markets, supermarkets, discount stores, or out of the back of a truck.

BEWARE THE BAIT AND SWITCH. Some unsavory vendors will display the genuine fragrance up front when you're shopping but substitute a fake when handing over your purchase."

*Name has been changed.

Common Myths About Counterfeits

All information below taken from www.myauthentics.com

"It’s easy to take the “totally harmless” approach. Shrug off the media, they’re sensational. Shrug off the medical reports, they’re sensational. The government too!

Are you seeing a pattern here? Saving a thousand dollars on a purse, or some change on batteries isn't a bargain if you really know the truth. And the more information that surfaces, the more we realize that common myths, like 'fakes are nothing to worry about' are truly myths.

They won't hurt me

Have you checked out the News clips or Links section yet? If it’s not enough to know all the harm done to others when you purchase fakes, know they’re dangerous to you too. The health and safety tests that keep us safe as consumers don’t exist to counterfeiters. They mix fake pills in cement bins; add bacterial water to copycat perfume; their electrical goods catch on fire, and their auto parts backfire.
They’re not called “bogus” for nothing.

But they're so cheap!

Confusing price with value is an easy mistake to make. Fake goods are cheap because their quality is so poor and they are often a danger to the people who buy them. What’s more, they don’t save you money in the long term. Real goods are usually more expensive, but they are higher quality (because of research and development), properly regulated, and will last longer.

Counterfeiters are criminals and many have links with drugs, illegal weapons and people trafficking. They don’t pay taxes, which means that the Government loses tax revenue. Less tax revenue means less money for public services, which often results in the tax burden going up for the rest of us. Counterfeiting is a massive industry--$650 billion per year! It might not seem like a watch here, a handbag there and some toys make a big difference in this world, but that’s what the industry thrives on.

Don’t get fooled into thinking one little item doesn’t make a difference, that you can’t make a difference. You can make a difference. You vote with your wallet. Vote against them by opting out.

Fake clothes and luxury goods are not so bad

Stop thinking you’re keeping profits from a multi-billion dollar corporation that doesn’t need it. When you buy counterfeits, you’re not just depriving millionaires from profits. You’re giving money to the same counterfeiters that shove toxic medicine and exploding batteries into the “stupid” handbag you just bought during international shipments. Counterfeiters make billions by counterfeiting everything, not one thing, so you might as well be buying the poison pet food that hurt Sparky.

Besides that, stylists agree, counterfeit fashion is kinda....tacky.

Counterfeit products won’t hurt anyone

In some ways, it’s understandable that you might think that. It might seem like a victimless crime. But it’s not. The production methods involved in counterfeiting often result in human rights abuses. Child labor experts say that most counterfeits are made by kids in sweatshops, who work for next to nothing.
No one is doing anything about it

First of all, be a trendsetter, not a follower. Second of all, many of the people you might admire are fiercely anti-knockoff, because they are so aware of the implications. Diane von Furstenberg and Zac Posen, for instance, are not so pro the fakes. And non-profits like the Teacher of Ten Thousand Generations Foundation are taking kids out of sweatshops and subsidizing their schooling so they can escape the deadly cycle of counterfeit production. You don’t have to join a group if you don’t want to. You don’t even have to be a crusader, telling those you love how dangerous this stuff is. All you have to do to be a hero to someone else, to possibly change the course of they’re life by discouraging the counterfeiters, is to say no to fakes.
Even if you try to stay away from fakes, they are increasingly difficult to spot. But slick packaging does not the same product make; counterfeiters spend so much time covering their tracks and making things seem “genuinely authentic” that they put very little effort into what’s inside that box or bottle.

Authentic companies, on the other hand, spend millions of dollars running safety tests, using top notch materials and ingredients, and constantly revising their formulas thanks to you, the consumer.

It turns out the difference between some change here and there is priceless. We're here to help you find out before you buy.

Beyond the impact on you, though, is the other cost of fakes--its impact on others. Fair trade is not a term to be slung around, and if you’re the kind of person who buys fair trade coffee grounds or water bottles that donate proceeds to good causes, then you’re probably the kind of person who would like to stay away from counterfeits. And the reason is simple:

Counterfeiting has negative impacts on our world. It hurts the children who spend their youth making handbags for pennies. It weakens national and international security by putting money into the hands of criminals, who don’t just use it for their own gain but forward it on to drug operations, gangs, and terrorist organizations. It even hurts your local economy, and could cost your own family their jobs--fakes have caused massive job loss in Western manufacturing, shipping, and other industries. We’re talking hundreds of thousands of your friends and neighbors.

The Real Cost of Fakes isn’t half as cheap or chic as many make it out to be. There are a lot of ways to do your part. Read up here and try to skirt the fakes epidemic. If you’d like, pass the information along to your friends.

And just remember: If you keep buying them, they'll keep making them.