He Helps the RealReal Keep It Real
Dominik
Halás, 29, is entrusted by the company to authenticate vintage clothes — many
of which are older than he.
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/11/21/style/realreal-authentication-luxury-vintage.html
Marisa
Meltzer
By Marisa
Meltzer
Published
Nov. 21, 2022
Updated Nov.
22, 2022
The trash
bags seemingly contained a treasure trove. Comme des Garçons, Maison Margiela,
Helmut Lang and Jean Paul Gaultier were all names on the tags of the clothes
stuffed inside.
The 10 black
plastic bags had arrived in September at a 500,000-square-foot building in
Perth Amboy, N.J., where the RealReal, the luxury resale marketplace, operates
one of four authentication centers. They had been sent by a seller who said the
clothes came from a vintage store that her aunt ran in Florida. After poring
over the bags’ contents, about 100 garments in total, it was determined that
the clothes were real — and that they could sell secondhand for as much as
$100,000.
“These are
some of the best Gaultier pieces we have ever come across,” said Dominik
Halás, a master authenticator at the RealReal who specializes in vintage
clothing, which the company defines as pieces that are at least 20 years old.
Mr. Halás,
29, is one of youngest people entrusted by the RealReal to authenticate
garments, jewelry and other accessories. Previously a men’s wear merchandising
manager and archival expert at the company, where he started working in 2017,
he was asked to join the authentication team soon after it started reselling
vintage clothing in 2019, the same year the RealReal became a publicly traded
company. (Its stock debuted on Nasdaq at $20 a share; it currently trades for
less than $2.)
“We needed
the right experts,” said Rachel Vaisman, its vice president of merchandising
operations. Although the RealReal has carried vintage handbags since it started
in 2011, vintage clothing required “a specialized expert with the extensive
knowledge and passion,” she added.
A Passion
for (Vintage) Fashion
At the
authentication center in Perth Amboy, clothing racks are arranged in rows that
appear longer than city blocks. One Monday earlier this month, Mr. Halás was
working his way through pieces from the shipment of 10 trash bags that had
arrived weeks before. The clothes, most of which were from the late 1980s to
early 2000s, included a double-breasted black-and-white Jean Paul Gaultier
jacket lined in fabric featuring a male torso. The jacket was from the
designer’s fall 1992 collection, which debuted before Mr. Halás was born.
Another
piece plucked out of the trash bags: “the iconic Margiela tattoo top” from the
spring 1994 collection, which Mr. Halás noted paid homage to an earlier piece
introduced in 1989. “It’s sheer and tight and the tattoo print resonates with
the audience,” he said. “They look so relevant to fashion now, which is why
they retain their value.” Mr. Halás added that the top probably sold for “a
few hundred dollars” when it debuted; the RealReal listed it at $7,000.
Many factors
determine the RealReal’s pricing. Condition is considered, as well as whether a
piece was ever was worn by a celebrity or featured in a museum exhibition.
Commissions paid to sellers vary based on factors including sale price and type
of item.
Mr. Halás
said that there has been interest lately in clothes from Romeo Gigli;
specifically pieces from the early 1990s, when a young Alexander McQueen worked
at the brand before starting his own line. “It’s great work and people are
really paying attention to the McQueen seasons,” he said. Other brands that
have become more covetable in recent years are the French label Marithe and
Francois Girbaud and the Japanese line Matsuda, he added.
Born in
Slovakia, Mr. Halás moved with his family to Montclair, N.J., in 1997, when he
was 4. “We were working class and against spending money on nonnecessities,” he
said, adding that his interest in fashion was in part stoked by a 2007 article
on the designer Helmut Lang in T: The New York Times Style Magazine.
As a student
at Montclair High School, he started a fashion club and became more familiar
with the vintage fashion business from working at Speakeasy Vintage, a boutique
in Montclair that is now closed.
Mr. Halás
started buying and reselling secondhand clothes online as a teenager. “If I had
$100 to invest, I would buy something on Japanese eBay and sell it on the U.S.
site for $300,” he said. After graduating from Brown University, where he
studied art history and architecture, he worked at showrooms including Goods
and Services in New York, and then consulted for Helmut Lang before joining the
RealReal.
Along the
way, Mr. Halás amassed his own fashion archive, which now contains some 500
pieces stored at his home in Jersey City, N.J., his parents’ home in Montclair
and his brother’s dorm room at Bard College. “A significant part of my net
worth is in clothing so I hope it pays off,” he said of his collection, which
includes men’s and women’s wear from such designers as Yohji Yamamoto and
Helmut Lang. Hedi Slimane is another favorite, particularly his pieces for Dior
Homme’s fall 2003 collection.
In addition
to clothes, Mr. Halás also collects old look books, which he and other
RealReal authenticators use for research.
Weeding Out
Fakes
When asked
how often he sees a fake item, Mr. Halás looked visibly uncomfortable and
glanced at Ms. Vaisman, his boss, before responding. “Several times a day I see
pieces that have failed to be authenticated,” he said. “I’ve come across
counterfeits that are made now to resemble clothes from the ’80s or ’90s.”
All items
sent to the company are ranked one to five for how likely a piece is to be
counterfeit. At the lower end of the scale, Mr. Halás said, would be a pair of
contemporary designer jeans, because the resale value wouldn’t be more than the
cost of producing a fake pair. At the higher end: bags with labels that say
Chanel, Gucci or Louis Vuitton, which are often counterfeited. With bags,
authenticators receive help from a proprietary patent-pending software called
Vision, which catalogs photos of authentic styles that can be used for
reference.
“This is how
we scale the Dominiks of the world,” Ms. Vaisman said.
The hardest
to judge items are reserved for master authenticators like Mr. Halás. While
looking at a black Yohji Yamamoto coat, he paid particular attention to the
tags, which noted the coat’s size with a number, a detail that meant the piece
was introduced after the spring 2000 collection (before that, he explained,
sizes were noted with letters). The tags also used a serif font, a detail that
Mr. Halás said indicated the coat was from a collection before 2010. The coat’s
YKK zipper with two pulls was a common element in pieces from the label, he
added.
“I know this
fits in with the collection,” said Mr. Halás, who ultimately determined the
coat was from the fall 2002 collection.
More
suspicious was a sweater with a Louis Vuitton tag. Like other pieces from the
brand’s fall 2018 collection, it had a graphic that read “peace and love.” But
a closer inspection revealed that the garment’s stitching was not neatly
aligned, and that its tag felt thicker than those of other Vuitton pieces. The
tag also noted it contained wool from vicuñas, which is very fine. Mr. Halás
said he could tell by touching the sweater that it was too coarse to contain
the material, so he ruled the garment a fake.
Most sellers
are notified when the RealReal cannot authenticate an item. Suspicious pieces
sent in unknowingly are returned. “We have a three-strike policy,” Ms. Vaisman
said. “We’ll inform the consignor as to why we cannot accept the item.” When
authenticators suspect an “obvious intent to defraud, we sequester the item and
destroy the item, and work with law enforcement,” she added.
If customers
think something they buy from the company is inauthentic, Ms. Vaisman said,
“we’ll always take it back and have an expert look at it.”
Watching Mr.
Halás in action suggested that his job is not exactly a science. Determining
the authenticity of certain garments — the Louis Vuitton sweater, say, or a
light blue nylon jacket with a Prada logo on it — can sometimes be more of an
art.
“The quality
of the material is throwing me off,” he said while handling the nylon jacket.
“I feel authentic Prada ready-to-wear every day and the best way I can say it
is this doesn’t feel expensive enough.”
A correction
was made on Nov. 21, 2022: An earlier version of this article, relying on
information from a spokeswoman at the RealReal, misspelled the surname of the
company’s vice president of merchandising operations. She is Rachel Vaisman,
not Viasman.
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