Inside the Delirious Rise of ‘Superfake’ Handbags
Can you tell the difference between a $10,000 Chanel
bag and a $200 knockoff? Almost nobody can, and it’s turning luxury fashion
upside down.
Credit...Grant
Cornett for The New York Times. Set designer: JoJo Li.
By Amy X.
WangPhotographs by Grant Cornett
Published
May 4, 2023
Updated May
5, 2023
Once upon a
time, the legend goes, Theseus slew the Minotaur and sailed triumphantly home
to Athens on a wooden ship. The vessel was preserved by Athenian citizens, who
continually replaced its rotting planks with strong, fresh timber so a
pilgrimage to Delos could be made each year in their hero’s name. Fascinated by
this mythical tale, the philosopher Plutarch found it to embody a “logical
question of things that grow”: After Theseus’s ship had been stripped of all
its original material, could it still be considered the same ship? His question
has caromed through centuries of Western thought. What if, Thomas Hobbes
wondered, someone rustled up a second boat out of the discarded planks; would
you now have two original vessels? And what about our own era of machine-made
duplication — does replication strip away the soul of creation?
Not long
ago, I found myself wandering through Paris with a fake Celine handbag slung
over my shoulder. In France, a country that prides itself on originating so
much of the world’s fashion, punishments for counterfeiting are severe, to the
point that I technically risked three years in prison just by carrying my
little knockoff around. But the bag’s fraudulence was undetectable to human
eyes. I was toting around a delicious, maddening secret: Like a ship remade
with identical wood, the bag on my arm had been built on the same plan, with
seemingly the same gleaming materials, as the “original.” Yet it was considered
inauthentic, a trick, a cheat.
My plunge
into the world of fantastically realistic counterfeit purses — known as
“superfakes” to vexed fashion houses and I.P. lawyers, or “unclockable reps” to
their enthusiastic buyers — began a couple of years earlier, in what I might
characterize as a spontaneous fit of lunacy. It was early 2021 when, thrown
into sensory overload by grisly pandemic headlines, I found my gaze drifting
guiltily to an advertisement in the right margin of a news site, where the
model Kaia Gerber arched her arms lovingly around a Celine Triomphe — a plain,
itty-bitty rectangular prism that in no universe could possibly be worth, as
further research informed me, $2,200.
I shut the
tab, horrified. Having grown up a first-generation immigrant whose family’s
idea of splurging was a monthly dinner at Pizza Hut, I refused to be the type
of person who lusted over luxury handbags. I had always understood that these
artifacts were not for me, in the way debutante balls or chartered Gulfstreams
were not for me. But, days later and still mired in the quicksand of
quarantine, I found myself cracking my laptop and Googling “buy Celine Triomphe
cheap.” This led me to a Reddit community of replica enthusiasts, who traded
details about “trusted sellers” capable of delivering a Chanel 2.55 or Loewe
Puzzle or Hermès Birkin that promised to be indistinguishable from the
original, and priced at a mere 5 percent or so of the M.S.R.P.
Where did
these sensational counterfeits come from? Fake goods, as anyone who has ever
strolled past the plasticky buffets on the Las Vegas Strip or Manhattan’s Canal
Street can tell you, are nothing new or rare. But in the past decade or so, a
new breed of knockoff purses has come onto the scene from China — boasting
shockingly good quality and slipping through customs gates like sand through a
sieve. And, as many an angry resale buyer can attest, they’re able to fool even
the most well-trained eye. “It’s a pervasive, tremendous problem,” Bob
Barchiesi, president of the International Anti-Counterfeiting Coalition, told
me. Hunter Thompson, who oversees the authentication process at the luxury
consignment site the RealReal, elaborated: “It’s gotten to the point that you
can see something in season replicated within that season.”
What was
once a sly novelty has bloomed into a gigantic market. In 2016, a Virginia
woman was sentenced for buying $400,000 worth of designer purses from
department stores, returning high-quality knockoffs and reselling the real bags
for profit; the stores went years without catching on. Before the “Real
Housewives” star Jen Shah pleaded guilty to telemarketing fraud last year,
police raided her house and found shelves and shelves of fake Louis Vuittons
mingled with authentic ones. In the pandemic, superfakes went supernova: A
killer combo of quarantine malaise, frenzied stimulus-check hobby spending and
the rise of sales via social-media sites like Instagram has propelled
consumers’ awareness of — and fervor for — these hyperrealistic copycats to new
heights. Now especially, in the face of rampant inflation, consumers coveting a
$10,000 handbag who are advertised a $100 copycat hardly need an extra push.
I WeChatted
a seller calling herself Linda — a name that, amid others like Aadi, Aooko, Mr.
Bao and Zippy, made her seem the least likely to scam me and/or get me placed
on a C.I.A. watch list — and instantly she sent me photos of a dozen possible Triomphes.
The seller reassured me that I’d have the chance to “QC” (quality-check) the
“PSPs” (pre-shipment photos). A “high tier” version of the bag would come out
to about 915 yuan, or $132. Which color would I like?
I hesitated
for a few days, then texted her: Cream, please. It was the middle of the night
in China, but Linda wrote me back within seconds: Done. It would be at my
doorstep in about three weeks.
Untangling
the problem of duplication in the fashion industry is like trying to rewrap
skeins of yarn. Designer houses spend billions fighting dupes, but even real
Prada Cleos and Dior Book Totes are made with machines and templates — raising
the question of what, exactly, is unique to an authentic bag. Is it simply a
question of who gets to pocket the money? (Hermès recently mounted, and won, a
trademark war against “MetaBirkin” NFTs.)
Besides,
replication is already threaded through the whole history of clothing. Before
industrialization, and well before handbags were popularized as accessories,
mimicry was essential to dressmaking: Rich women would observe in-vogue
silhouettes, then direct their own seamstresses to duplicate the cuts,
waistlines or sleeves. It wasn’t until the mass-production inventions of the
19th century that designers became paranoid about the riffraff’s being able to
ape their status symbols. In 1951, the American writer Sally Iselin reported
for The Atlantic on the pointedly snobbish shopping culture in Paris. But, she
observed, while copyiste was a dirty word in France’s haute-couture circles,
skilled tailors in Rome were more than happy to fit her with cheaper twins of
the same ball gowns.
In Iselin’s
time, such boutiques were a guilty marvel; nowadays, shoppers don’t bat an eye
at the idea of snapping up a Balenciaga silhouette from Zara, Shein or
AliExpress. Even the superrich crave a good deal, as a Manhattan woman with a
treasure trove of superfake Birkins confessed to The Cut last year. On the
other side of the world in China — a country that is known for its fake-making
and that had no compunctions about building a replica of the Gardens of
Versailles — there are, by some estimates, as many as several million people
who make a living delivering these good deals.
I spoke
with Kelly, one such person, seeking to peek under the hood of the shadowy
business. (“Kelly” is not her real name; I’m referring to her here by the
English moniker that she uses on WhatsApp. I contacted more than 30 different
superfake-bag-sellers before one agreed to an interview.) Five years ago, Kelly
worked in real estate in Shanghai, but she got fed up with trekking to an
office every day. Now she works from home in Guangzhou, often hammering out a
deal for a Gucci Dionysus or Fendi Baguette on her phone with one hand,
wrangling lunch for her 8-year-old daughter with the other. Kelly finds the
whole business of luxury bags — the sumptuous leather, razor-straight heat
stamps, hand stitches, precocious metal mazes of prancing sangles and
clochettes and boucles and fermoirs — “way too fussy,” she tells me in Chinese.
But the work-life balance is great. As a sales rep for replicas, Kelly makes up
to 30,000 yuan, or about $4,300, a month, though she has heard of A-listers who
net up to 200,000 yuan a month — which would work out to roughly $350,000 a
year.
On a good
day, Kelly can sell more than 30 gleaming Chloés and Yves Saint Laurents, to a
client base of mostly American women. “If a bag can be recognized as fake,” she
told me, “it’s not a worthwhile purchase for the customer, so I only sell bags
that are high-quality but also enticingly affordable — $200 or $300 is the
sweet spot.” Kelly keeps about 45 percent of each sale, out of which she pays
for shipping, losses and other costs. The rest is wired to a network of
manufacturers who divvy up proceeds to pay for overhead, materials and
salaries. When a client agrees to order a bag from Kelly, she contacts a
manufacturer, which arranges for a Birkin bag to roll out of the warehouse into
an unmarked shipping box in a week or so.
In
Guangzhou, where a vast majority of the world’s superfakes are thought to
originate, experts have identified two main reasons behind the illicit goods’
lightning-fast new speeds: sophistication in bag-making technology and in the
bag-makers themselves.
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One such
innovation in the latter is a disjointed, flat-string, hard-to-track supply
chain. When the intellectual-property lawyer Harley Lewin was the subject of a
New Yorker profile in 2007, he could often be found busting through hidden
cellars on raids around the world. But increasingly, Lewin told me, “I’m sort
of the guy in the spy novel who’s called ‘Control’ and sits in a room,” trying
to sniff out “the bad guys” from screenshots of texts and D.M.s. Counterfeiting
operations are no longer pyramid-shaped hierarchies with ever-higher bosses to
roll: “Nowadays it’s a series of blocks, the financier and the designers and
the manufacturers, and none of the blocks relate to each other,” Lewin
explains. “So if you bust one block, odds are they can replace it in 10
minutes. The person you bust has very little information about who organizes
what and where it goes.” Indeed, Kelly, even though she has sold every color
variation of Louis Vuitton Neverfull under the sun, only handles bags in person
on rare occasions to inspect quality. Sellers don’t stock inventory. They
function as the consumer-facing marketing block, holding scant knowledge of how
other blocks operate. Kelly just gets daily texts from a liaison at each
outlet, letting her know of their output: “The factories won’t even tell us
where they are.”
As for how
the superfakes are achieving their unprecedented verisimilitude, Lewin, who has
observed their factories from the inside, says it’s simply a combination of
skillful artisanship and high-quality raw materials. Some superfake
manufacturers travel to Italy to source from the same leather markets that the
brands do; others buy the real bags to examine every stitch. Chinese
authorities have little to no incentive to shut down these operations, given
their contributions to local economies, the potential embarrassment to local
ministers and the steady fraying of China’s political ties with the Western
nations where savvy online buyers clamor for the goods. “They avoid taxes,”
Lewin says. “The working conditions are terrible. But all of that goes to
turning out a very high-quality fake at very low cost.”
For replica
enthusiasts on Reddit, “187 Factory” is legendary for its top-notch Chanel
bags. It commands a premium of $600 for a caviar-leather quilted double-flap —
pricier than a midtier $200 rep, but still far from the bag’s asking price at a
Chanel boutique ($10,200) or on resale sites ($5,660 for one in “very good”
condition on Fashionphile, $3,600 for one with “heavy scratches” and
“noticeable balding” on the RealReal). But as Kelly describes it, “187 Factory”
sounds like a branding ploy for what’s really just a well-organized chain of
blocks, functionally indistinguishable from other miniature companies making
premium knockoffs out of the same buckles and patterns. Kelly always lets
clients know that she can get them equal-quality bags for less than what the
187 people charge. Still, many buyers insist they must have a “bag from 187.”
Some have told Kelly that they’ve saved paychecks for months just to buy a 187
Chanel — in a curious echo of the fervent consumers doing the same for the
authentic bags.
Those whose
business it is to verify luxury bags insist, at least publicly, that there’s
always a “tell” to a superfake. At the RealReal, where designer handbags go
through rounds of scrutiny, including X-rays and measuring fonts down to the
millimeter, Thompson told me that “sometimes, an item can be too perfect, too
exacting, so you’ll look at it and know something is up.” And, he added, touch
and smell can be giveaways. Rachel Vaisman, the company’s vice president of
merchandising operations, said the company will contact law-enforcement
officials if it suspects a consignor is sending in items with the intent to
defraud.
But one
authenticator I spoke with confesses that it’s not always so clear-cut. The
fakes “are getting so good, to the point that it comes down to inside etchings,
or nine stitches instead of eight,” he told me. “Sometimes you really have no
idea, and it becomes a time-consuming egg hunt, comparing photos on other
websites and saying, ‘Does this hardware look like this one?’” (He asked to
remain anonymous because he is not permitted to speak on behalf of his
company.) He and his colleagues have their theories as to how the superfakes
that come across their desks are so jaw-droppingly good: “We suspect it’s
someone who maybe works at Chanel or Hermès who takes home real leathers. I
think the really, really good ones have to be from people who work for the
companies.” And every time a brand switches up its designs, as today’s
fast-paced luxury houses are wont to do, authenticators find themselves in the
dark again.
Though U.S.
officials try valiantly to sniff out impostor goods, too, seizing more than
300,000 fake bags and wallets in fiscal year 2022, the sheer volume of
counterfeit imports — fakes in general are estimated to be a bustling,
multibillion-dollar industry — means that authorities are able to inspect, on
some estimates, as little as 5 percent of what comes in. For superfake sellers
and buyers, those are great odds.
After
weeks, and hundreds of anxious Control-Rs on the DHL tracking page, and a daily
pondering about what my mother might say when she encountered my mug shot on
the evening news, my Celine Triomphe finally materialized — anticlimactically,
in a manner much like anything else I’d ever ordered online. The box was
lightly battered from having traveled through Abu Dhabi and, funnily enough, a
network of shipping hubs across France and Italy before it landed in my lap in
New York. I ripped open the tissue paper to extract the Triomphe, that glorious
vessel, my purse of Theseus. By sight, nothing was detectable. I faithfully counted
the stitches, measured dimensions. Underneath my hand, the leather did feel a
bit stiff, rather less plush than the version I’d fondled for an unnecessary
amount of time at Celine’s Soho boutique beforehand. But this giveaway, this
“tell,” would graze against my shoulder and no one else’s.
A strange,
complicated cloud of emotions engulfed me wherever I carried the bag. I
contacted more sellers and bought more replicas, hoping to shake it loose. I
toted a (rather fetching) $100 Gucci 1955 Horsebit rep through a vacation
across Europe; I’ve worn the Triomphe to celebrity-flooded parties in
Manhattan, finding myself preening under the approving, welcome-into-our-fold
smiles of wealthy strangers. There is a smug superiority that comes with luxury
bags — that’s sort of the point — but to my surprise, I found that this was
even more the case with superfakes. Paradoxically, while there’s nothing more
quotidian than a fake bag that comes out of a makeshift factory of nameless
laborers studying how to replicate someone else’s idea, in another sense,
there’s nothing more original.
While a
wardrobe might reveal something of the wearer’s personality and emotion, a
luxury handbag is a hollow basin, expressing nothing individualistic at all.
Instead, a handbag communicates certain ineffable ideas: money, status, the
ability to move around in the world. And so, if you believe that fashion is
inherently all about artifice — consider wink-wink items like Maison Margiela’s
Replica sneaker, or the mind-boggling profits of LVMH’s mass-produced luxury
items — then there is an argument to be made that the superfake handbag, blunt
and upfront to the buyer about its trickery, is the most honest, unvarnished
item of all.
I asked the
writer Judith Thurman, whose sartorial insights I’ve always admired, about the
name-brand handbag’s decades-long hold on women. Why do we yearn for very
expensive sacks in the first place? Why do some buyers submit to
thousand-dollar price hikes and risk bankruptcy for them? “It’s a kind of
inclusive exclusiveness,” Thurman told me. “A handbag is a little treat, and it’s
the only fashion item that is not sacrificial.” Clothes, with their unforgiving
size tags and rigid shapes, can instill a cruel horror or disappointment in
their wearers. Bags, meanwhile, dangle no shame, only delight. “There is an
intangible sense when you are wearing something precious that makes you feel
more precious yourself,” she theorizes. “And we all need — in this unbelievable
age of cosmic insecurity — a little boost you can stick over your shoulder that
makes you feel a bit more special than if you were wearing something that cost
$24.99. It’s mass delusion, but the fashion business is about mass delusion. At
what point does a mass delusion become a reality?”
Thurman’s
first designer-bag splurge was an Issey Miyake Bao Bao she bought for the full
retail price of about $900. (“In buying that bag, I became an insane person.”)
After it fell apart from wear, she couldn’t justify the price of another — and
Issey Miyake had also stopped making her preferred model. So she went on
Alibaba and bought two cheap replicas. “It was very strange,” Thurman says.
“There was an aura to the real thing that the fake didn’t have. And if you ask
me what does that mean, I really almost can’t say. Part of it was the spirit of
going to the shop and paying more money than I could afford.”
Volkan
Yilmaz goes by Tanner Leatherstein on TikTok, where some 800,000 followers
watch him slash and tear popular silhouettes from Chanel or Louis Vuitton apart
at the seams to assess whether the quality of any given handbag is “worth it”
from a quality and craftsmanship perspective. (Spoiler: Very rarely so. With
the exception of Bottega Veneta or Hermès.) “A luxury bag’s cost is never about
its material,” Yilmaz told me.
That the
profits of one idea’s relentless duplications funnel only into one (fat,
corporate) pocket is precisely why many younger consumers see fake bags as
better than the real thing. To them, counterfeit luxury — in a world already
awash in lower-priced “dupes” of every kind, from eye shadows to electronics —
is not an unethical scandal but a big, joyful open secret. Replica communities
laugh at big luxury firms, taking on a subversive, stick-it-to-the-man
attitude. A handbag “is a mass-produced item — it’s not a piece hanging in a
museum,” Kirstin Chen, who was inspired to write her novel “Counterfeit” by the
Virginia woman who scammed department stores, said to me. Jordan T. Alexander,
a 29-year-old TikTok creator who has made videos about replica bags, told me
she sometimes thinks of them as “the democratization of fashion.” Trina, a
woman who sells imported replicas to customers in Las Vegas and requested to be
identified only by her first name, sees the most passion for fakes among
middle-class women of color who seem emboldened to find themselves with access
to a different world: “A bag gives a woman a more classy demeanor. The woman
who is walking out of Target, getting in their vehicle or whatever, feeling
good? That’s what it’s all about.”
In the face
of widening wealth disparity around the globe, it’s no longer fashionable
anyway to gate-keep expensive things. The actress Jane Birkin, who lent her
name to Hermès’s crown jewel, shrugs at fake Birkins: “It’s very nice that
everyone’s got one or wants one,” she told Vogue in 2011. “If people want to go
for the real thing, fine. If they go for copies, that’s fine, too. I really
don’t think it matters.” The first recorded instance of the English word “snob”
dates back to 18th-century cobblers, and was soon used in reference to any
person of low rank. (One rumor, though unsubstantiated, pins the etymology to
the Latin phrase sine nobilitate, or “without nobility.”) According to the
Oxford Dictionary of Word Origins, university students snickered at the lowly
“snobs” outside their gates, and the word eventually came to describe people
who tried to mimic their more well-to-do neighbors — early templates of today’s
schemers, scammers, wannabes — only for the word to come to define this elite
group’s own high-class arrogance.
Was I a
snob in the original sense or the contemporary one? I’d been drawn to
multithousand-dollar designer bags because they felt so elusive and
unavailable, but now that they, via superfakes, had become available to me, I
no longer really wanted them; the pursuit of them had started to feel, I realized
at some point, marvelously worthless.
I asked
Kelly what she thought about her clients and their obsessive yearning for these
brilliant, mundane, often aesthetically unimaginative tiny objects. I yearned
for her to unfurl my unease, to rip open the secret seams and expose something
profound.
“You know,
there’s an old saying in Chinese,” Kelly told me.
I thought
she was about to recite a fragment of an ancient poem, or to synthesize the joy
and genius of superfakes into some wonderful proverb that could reconcile our
collective love of duplicity with our human insistence on realism. But Kelly,
practical, business-minded and raised on a different side of the world, didn’t
find my loose-ended Western anxieties all that interesting. Or maybe she had
misunderstood what I was asking. Kelly went on: “The saying is, ‘You always get
what you pay for.’”
Grant
Cornett is an artist who resides in the Catskill Mountains. His work focuses on
objects and their relation to light and time in natural settings and more
composed commercial projects.
Amy X. Wang
is the assistant managing editor of The New York Times Magazine. @amyxwang
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