Hi! I'm not really new to the concept of replicas, but I am new to this forum and never knew such a wealth of info existed. I have been learning so much the past few days! I'm a huge fan of the YM Rolesium and even contemplated spending 1300 on one from another site before I found this place. Glad I didn't make that mistake!!! Anyways, on to my story..
I recently took a job working for a pawn shop until I can get back into my regular line of work. The job market is wonky where I live and I had to keep money coming in so... do what ya gotta do sometimes. The other day I'm standing behind the counter watching a busted Cadillac pull into the lot, rear of car smashed in, paint oxidized, not a straight body panel on the car, etc.. watched a man and his wife/girlfriend get out of the car, neither dressed very well and then I spotted it! From my research and own lust for said object I spotted his Yacht-Master before he even got into the store. It practically jumped off his wrist it was so bright compared to everything else on and around him. The first thought that came to mind was "fake" and I thought no..give him a chance, don't stereotype, etc.. He walks up to the counter and without saying a word looks left and right and nervously takes off his watch. He hands it to me and asks in a low tone "Do you handle high end merchandise like this"? As soon as he took it off, I knew it wasn't real. The o in Rolex was wrong among other things. I said I would have to check with my supervisor and that I would be right back. My supervisor pegged it as a replica immediately and said to go back out and say this word for word: "My supervisor says we can offer you 10 dollars for your watch". His reason for this is that 1) It lets the customer know that we realize the watch isn't real 2) It saves the customer face. Better to only be offered 10 bux and left at that rather than have someone call you out with a fake watch in front of others. So I did what I was told. Instead of leaving, the man makes this big scene demanding to know why we thought his watch wasn't real (even though we never said that) and yelling that 10 dollars was an embarrassment. He only embarrassed himself in front of the other customers in the end. The watch had all the tells of the replica - font was wrong, o was wrong, date window was off, I wonder if he really thought it was real or if he was trying to scam me?
On my pawn shop related note, I'm buying a funky Breitling replica I found last week. They were selling it for nothing, and I will post pics of it to the Breitling forum once I get it. I promise it will be good for a laugh! I also found out that legally the pawn shop is not supposed to even knowingly accept a replica But if it's dirt cheap, they usually will.
Hope this is in the right area, my apologies if it is not...