Counterfeit
fashion is a universally growing business, and it is getting
increasingly difficult to differentiate designer handbags
from fake ones. Industry insiders state that some counterfeit
goods are actually produced by the same manufacturers who
produce the original pieces; they simply produce extra batches
of the same goods, change a few small details, and sell them
on the black market for one-tenth of the retail price.
Authenticity
is slowly losing its value as bogus imitations are being
substituted for the genuine products. There is a
huge market for fake items, owing to peer pressure. If people
cannot afford the real thing, the easiest alternative is to
head towards an online auction or a street corner to purchase
a counterfeit designer handbag. Knockoff designer goods are
readily available on the street in areas such as Los Angeles'
Santee Street and New York's Canal Street. And the Internet
is replete with online auctions offering "Inspired by" copies.
The old method of spotting fakes was simple: shoddy hardware,
cheap leather, and misspelled or tarnished logos were a dead
giveaway. Now, the fakes are so good that only a trained eye
can tell the difference.
Imitations
are selling, and at a fraction of the cost of the originals.
A chic teenager justified her penchant for purchasing
knockoff designer handbags by nonchalantly stating, "I
cannot afford $500 for a Louis Vuitton handbag, but that does
not deter me from looking fashionable. My counterfeit Vuitton,
priced at $75 gives the real thing a run for its money! Carrying
a Vuitton or Dior handbag is a status symbol, as long as no
one realizes that it is not the real thing."