1. Movement. First of all, you must be very familiar with the movement model and movement logo used in the real watch. If you encounter a fake watch with a transparent bottom, you can tell the authenticity at a glance. Secondly, you should carefully observe the inscriptions on the movement. The engravings on genuine movements are clear and beautiful, while those on fake watches are rough and have no sense of beauty. Finally, you need to have a deep understanding of the performance of the movement, such as the winding method (manual or automatic, one-way or two-way), and the sound of the movement. The plywood or pendulum inside the movement of a genuine Tissot watch is marked with the Tissot trademark name; the movement is stable in the case assembly; the inside of the movement is clean. There is no Tissot trademark on the plywood or balancer in the counterfeit Tissot watch movement, or the Tissot trademark is rough, blurred, skewed, or simply pasted with a small copper piece; the movement is not clean, and some have copper inside. crumbs, hair strands, fingerprints, etc.
2. Look at the label on the back cover. Look at the factory label on the bottom of the watch. Usually there will be a brand logo on the label of a famous watch, as well as a watch model number. Some watches will also have laser anti-counterfeiting on the bottom label.
3. Look at the appearance. First of all, you must carefully observe the appearance of the watch, including the polishing of the appearance: see whether the polishing technique of the watch is delicate. The polishing of famous watches is very particular, and the craftsmanship of fake watches is far from it. Font: The font of the real watch is full, while the font of the fake watch appears lack of confidence. Function: Most fake watches will work hard on functions, which is the breakthrough point to see through fake watches. The functions of many fake watches are just decorations (such as moon phase, perpetual calendar, tourbillon, etc.) but actually do not have this function. Hands: Genuine hands can be distinguished from fakes by their length, thickness, shape and material. For example, the "blue steel hands" often used in high-end watches. The color of the hands of the real watch is a full deep blue, which is fired through a complicated process, while the blue of the fake watch is brushed on. Disk: Commonly used disk techniques for high-end watches include enamel, guilloché, metal radiant disk, shell disk, etc. Some watches also have their own unique technologies, such as Rolex’s computer disk and Cartier’s pure gold and silver plated carvings. Disk etc. Diamonds and setting techniques: Look at setting techniques, diamond quality and size.