Quality Replica Watches Revealing the secret signatures

— Whether it is on movements or dials, brands, craftsmen and Rolex Replica watchmakers like to place their seal. In this way they authenticate, qualify and sign their creations.


Secret signatures


It is customary in art to sign your work. Besides being an integral part of the artist’s style, it is also a means of authenticating a work. Some Swiss Replica Watches brands have adopted this practice, with an approach that goes beyond mere branding. Signing a piece means more than just putting your name on it. It indicates the rarity of a Rolex Replica watches, its origin, its authenticity, using processes which by their very nature are discreet.

Paradoxically, some secret signatures are no such thing. They have become so well-known that they have lost their furtive status and become an integral part of a brand’s identity. Cartier, which was copied very early in its history, had initially thought up a strategy that has since become indispensable: the bar of the 10 or 8 in Roman numerals which decorates most of its dials is not solid: you can read the name Cartier in it.

 

Cartier signature

Cartier replaces the bar of the X by its name, which is barely visible.
© David Chokron/Worldtempus

Secret signatures can also be found on the movements themselves. The star of Vaucher Manufacture or the initials ARP of Audemars Piguet Renaud & Papi can be read on the calibres that these manufacturers supply to Richard Mille.

 

Richard Mille signature

The Vaucher star on a Richard Mille calibre.

© David Chokron/Worldtempus

An elaborate cartridge surrounding the initials is the seal of Chopard’s L.U.C manufacture.

Chopard signature

The letters L.U.C in their cartridge, engraved on a Chopard Fake Watches UK calibre.
© David Chokron/Worldtempus

And who knows about the new signature on the creations of Bovet? The Virtuoso II manufacture calibres are surrounded by a maxim that the brand hardly talks about: they are “Faictes de mains de maistres. Pour servir ponctuels gentilshommes. Ce par quoi attestons longue valeur.” This expression, written in archaic French, translates as “Made by hands of masters. To serve punctual gentlemen. Whereby we attest long-standing value.”

 

Bovet signature

Bovet now adds a long saying on the flange that surrounds its Virtuoso II calibre.
© David Chokron/Worldtempus

 

Some high-end dials are signed, which is even harder to spot. For example, at Breguet, all Replica Watches UK with an engine-turned dial have an engraving on either side of the 6 o’clock position.

 

Breguet signature

Breguet engraves its name on its engine-turned dials.
© David Chokron/Worldtempus

 

The brand shares with Blancpain the penchant for a transparent engraving on its enamel dials, which is almost invisible and thus very difficult to capture on a photograph.

 

Blancpain signature

Blancpain discreetly places its initials on its enamel dials.
© David Chokron/Worldtempus

 

The artistic crafts pieces by Vacheron Constantin that have a miniature or enamel painting bear the initials AP. It is Anita Porchet that signs these creations, the most delicate by the Geneva brand, and thus has her talent recognised by the brand according her a place on the face of its watches. For its Quai de l’Ile model, Vacheron Constantin even joined forces with a banknote printer to create a watermark under the sapphire crystal, the ultimate weapon against illicit reproductions.

 

Vacheron Constantin signature

The dials on the artistic crafts pieces by Vacheron Constantin are signed by their creator, most often Anita Porchet.
© David Chokron/Worldtempus

 

Anything that can be seen can be copied. Each design element on a watch, its dial, its case, its movement, if recorded by someone with malicious intent, could be reproduced, counterfeited. The only truly effective remedy against copying, even of the high-quality kind, is even higher quality. The know-how should be so precious and applied in such detail that reproducing it destroys the copy’s reason for being: its affordable price. It is, therefore, the quality of work, combined with the widest possible awareness of the general culture of watchmaking, that can preserve brands, watches and customers from deceit.