Whiston Blade
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Aug 14, 2015
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I loved my knock-off Barcelona #10 Romario shirt I got whilst on holiday in the 90's.
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I have had a great "fake" back in the 80's
Back in the early 80's, my brother and sister in law went to Thailand for three weeks. While they were there, they were looking for gifts to bring back, and rather than bring me a "Welcome to Thailand" set of drink mats (or whatever people buy other people as souvenirs), they bought me a "Boss" polo shirt. Now at the time, my sis in law, who was foreign, had never heard of Hugo Boss, and thought that "Boss" meant, well, "The Boss"!, so she thought that would be a funny gift for me, it cost about 1.50.
The material quality was fantastic and it lasted years without fading or any other issue, lasted much longer than my more expensive stuff.
When I first went to China in the 90's, on business (Beijing), the blokes I was meeting met me for lunch in an area they called "Silk Street", in other words, the garment district.
They explained while I was there, that when a company (they used "Timberland" as the example) uses a Chinese factory to make, say 500 jackets, or 800 shirts, or whatever, the factory give them a quote which is fairly accurate. Once the order is accepted, the factory guys re-lay the pattern onto the fabric again, and by being clever, can squeeze an extra 20-30 jackets or shirts out of the same roll of material.
That was what was being sold in the shops in "Silk Street", you could have the designer label sowed in or not , it was a bit cheaper without the label, but to all intents and purposes, this was the same you would pay a ton for in the west, but for a fraction of the price. I didn't buy anything but it was dirt cheap.
I even saw counterfeit Nintendo systems in Chinese department stores, called "Dendi" or something like that, with pictures of Jackie Chan holding one!
Best thing I ever saw, and kick myself for not buying one, was a counterfeit Fender Strat in China, it looked and played every bit as good as an original (it can't have been original at the price is was for sale at). A few years later I was working in Moscow (long story) and met the Russian equivalent of Eric Clapton, who had appeared on Live Aid in Russia, and was a great guitarist. A few of us were at his house, drinking Vodka, and someone mentioned I played guitar (badly!), and he started playing a Strat and handed it to me, while he grabbed another one, just playing blues riffs.
We swapped guitars back and forth and he asked me which one I preferred and (yep, you guessed it) the one that was best (and he agreed) was a Chinese fake, while the other one was a real Fender that Fender had sent him. Incredible really.
Pick them up for under a 10er in many shops.
I bought a fake "George" polo shirt.it was wank.Pick them up for under a 10er in many shops.
My old boss lived in China for a few years and had 2 boxes of fake Moleskin notebooks made with his name (fancy titles and all) printed on the front, he loved anything like that. He was minted so could afford the real ones but he was a bit of Del Boy so loved the fakes. He had a couple of Panerai watches and managed to crack the screen on one, went to China on a business trip and got a fake screen as a replacement. The watch was over £10k and I couldn't believe he'd put a fake replacement screen in it for the sake of a few hundred quid.
I'm off to HK next Easter so I'll try and convince the Mrs to buy a handbag with the old "it's from the same factory as the real ones" line. It'll never work!
The vast majority of fashion brand watches (Hugo Boss, Calvin Klein, LaCoste, Armani) are made in Chinese factories owned by the same company, they have a brand of their own called "Fossil". The exception, from what I can work out, is the US brand called Michael Kors, who seem to use even cheaper factories and people in the watch trade say the insides of the watches are worth a couple of quid, if that.
I don't know where you're shopping
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Here you go, saved you roughly £15 there. Take your pick. You're welcome
mate of mine had a Tag Heuer.. it was always breaking down. he was going on holiday to Goa so he bought a snide. went in the sea with it, threw it about, worked perfect. When he went to HL Brown to pick up his fixed Tag the watchsmith saw his fake and asked if he could take a look. 'ah Seiko time piece .. they all have these in. it's nearly as good as the one in the Tag' !I like watches, which is something I got from my Grandad (who took me to my first Blades games as a lad and who I owe everything about my love of SUFC), he liked watches and clocks. He was born in 1900, and as young man, always wore a three piece suit with a pocket watch and chain in the waistcoat.
I still have a couple of his pocket watches, might be worth something, might not, but to me they are a priceless reminder of him.
When he died, he left me some money and I bought an expensive (at the time) wrist watch, as a tribute to him, I still have it but it is worn and probably not worth anything.
As for modern watches, anything that is a fashion brand (as most of you will know), is no better than a fake you buy on holiday, in fact the fakes are better in most cases.
The vast majority of fashion brand watches (Hugo Boss, Calvin Klein, LaCoste, Armani) are made in Chinese factories owned by the same company, they have a brand of their own called "Fossil". The exception, from what I can work out, is the US brand called Michael Kors, who seem to use even cheaper factories and people in the watch trade say the insides of the watches are worth a couple of quid, if that.
A real watch company, like Rolex, Omega, Brietling, etc., make their own watches, which cost a fortune of course.
Seiko make the "movement" for a lot of other companies and their other brand "Pulsar" make very decent watches that are well built and are water resistant to a decent depth.
Anyway, back to football..........
Oh. Sorry. I've mislead you. The Carrier Bag Firm don't buy Fake Shirts "online" or "mail order". We pick them up in person on Far East Ground Ticking trips. We're in Singapore in November en route....The real thrill Is wondering if customs will snag it before it reaches your door step. None of that excitement from sufcdirect.
Dinosaur.....I've got a batch of fake Tesco carrier bags. Talk to me!
Oh. Sorry. I've mislead you. The Carrier Bag Firm don't buy Fake Shirts "online" or "mail order". We pick them up in person on Far East Ground Ticking trips. We're in Singapore in November en route....
The Grand Seiko is apparently excellent quality, the ‘snowflake’ is the iconic model. I’ve got the SK007 (I’m into Swiss watches really but I wanted some kind of ‘beater’ and they were really highly rated as a cheaper watch). It’s solid enough but it doesn’t keep time that well.I like watches, which is something I got from my Grandad (who took me to my first Blades games as a lad and who I owe everything about my love of SUFC), he liked watches and clocks. He was born in 1900, and as young man, always wore a three piece suit with a pocket watch and chain in the waistcoat.
I still have a couple of his pocket watches, might be worth something, might not, but to me they are a priceless reminder of him.
When he died, he left me some money and I bought an expensive (at the time) wrist watch, as a tribute to him, I still have it but it is worn and probably not worth anything.
As for modern watches, anything that is a fashion brand (as most of you will know), is no better than a fake you buy on holiday, in fact the fakes are better in most cases.
The vast majority of fashion brand watches (Hugo Boss, Calvin Klein, LaCoste, Armani) are made in Chinese factories owned by the same company, they have a brand of their own called "Fossil". The exception, from what I can work out, is the US brand called Michael Kors, who seem to use even cheaper factories and people in the watch trade say the insides of the watches are worth a couple of quid, if that.
A real watch company, like Rolex, Omega, Brietling, etc., make their own watches, which cost a fortune of course.
Seiko make the "movement" for a lot of other companies and their other brand "Pulsar" make very decent watches that are well built and are water resistant to a decent depth.
Anyway, back to football..........
mate of mine had a Tag Heuer.. it was always breaking down. he was going on holiday to Goa so he bought a snide. went in the sea with it, threw it about, worked perfect. When he went to HL Brown to pick up his fixed Tag the watchsmith saw his fake and asked if he could take a look. 'ah Seiko time piece .. they all have these in. it's nearly as good as the one in the Tag' !
if the Chinese ever master the perpetual movement, then Rolex and Omega will be in trouble
When a CBF Grandee
mate of mine had a Tag Heuer.. it was always breaking down. he was going on holiday to Goa so he bought a snide. went in the sea with it, threw it about, worked perfect. When he went to HL Brown to pick up his fixed Tag the watchsmith saw his fake and asked if he could take a look. 'ah Seiko time piece .. they all have these in. it's nearly as good as the one in the Tag' !
if the Chinese ever master the perpetual movement, then Rolex and Omega will be in trouble
The Grand Seiko is apparently excellent quality, the ‘snowflake’ is the iconic model. I’ve got the SK007 (I’m into Swiss watches really but I wanted some kind of ‘beater’ and they were really highly rated as a cheaper watch). It’s solid enough but it doesn’t keep time that well.
Whilst the Swiss companies always go on about in-house movements they’re not always fully in-house. Omega use a modified Valjoux for their chronographs, even the ones with the Daniels escapement and, of course, the early Rolex Daytonas used Zenith movements.
What did you get with your inheritance? I’m more interested in vintage watches (I like some of the new ones but, fuck me, they’re expensive). I like the late sixties/early seventies ones, particularly Omega, as you can pick them up for a reasonable price. The earlier ones are too small and the later ones suffer from a fall in quality.
In fact club should be paying them for free advertising..Its like the fuss over fake watches. As if anyone buying a fake Rolex for £50 is costing the company ten grand because they didn't buy a real one. People buy fakes for a laugh, it doesn't cost anyone anything.
Interesting brand that was tipped to be a big player. Probably hasn’t quite made it but it still rated and had made steady progress in the luxury watch market. I think they started in the 70s which was quite brave as many were crapping it over the quartz revolution.At the time, (early 90's), I was working with lads who all wore Tag and Rolex, and I wanted something different, looked around for ages and found a Maurice Lacroix that I really liked, all metal with 22 carat gold detail and a divers bezel. Not as big and chunky as modern watches, but looked good at the time, sporty but equally at home if wearing a suit and tie.
Dinosaur.....
The Carrier Bag Firm are proud to be Environmentally Sustainable. Bag For Life all the way......
We get those ones made of hemp. When a CBF Grandee passes away, we roll up & smoke their bag as a way of paying respect
The point of a luxury product is that it’s expensive. 90% of Rolex owners aren’t really into watches and horology, they just want something on their wrist that says ‘I’m considerably richer than yow’. They know everyone knows Rolex are expensive whereas the sub-contractors they manage and the blokes down the pub might not realise a Vacheron or a Lange & Sohne is superior. They probably think JLC is John Lewis’ own brand.
Interesting brand that was tipped to be a big player. Probably hasn’t quite made it but it still rated and had made steady progress in the luxury watch market. I think they started in the 70s which was quite brave as many were crapping it over the quartz revolution.
I’d guess that it’s still got some value but who cares anyway. If you like a watch, you like it.
"Rolex" is the first name on everyone's lips when asked if they know any "posh watches".
Patek Philippe......now that really is a "when I win the lottery" sort of watch.
Where's that?I'd hardly make as sweeping a statement as The Star have made by saying counterfiet shirts are killing the club.
The Grand Seiko is apparently excellent quality, the ‘snowflake’ is the iconic model. I’ve got the SK007 (I’m into Swiss watches really but I wanted some kind of ‘beater’ and they were really highly rated as a cheaper watch). It’s solid enough but it doesn’t keep time that well.
Whilst the Swiss companies always go on about in-house movements they’re not always fully in-house. Omega use a modified Valjoux for their chronographs, even the ones with the Daniels escapement and, of course, the early Rolex Daytonas used Zenith movements.
What did you get with your inheritance? I’m more interested in vintage watches (I like some of the new ones but, fuck me, they’re expensive). I like the late sixties/early seventies ones, particularly Omega, as you can pick them up for a reasonable price. The earlier ones are too small and the later ones suffer from a fall in quality.
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