Alright folks, today was one of those days. Someone tried to sell my buddy a Cartier Bleu, but man, something just felt off. He called me over, said “Take a look, good deal right?” and my gut screamed fake. Couldn’t put my finger on it right away, but I knew I had to figure it out. So, I grabbed my loupe and got down to work, comparing the fishy one against pictures and specs I knew were legit. Here’s exactly how I went through it, step by step.

First Things First
I took the damn watch in my hands. That initial feel? Super important. The weight was the first giveaway. Fakes often feel feather-light, like cheap plastic pretending to be metal. A real Bleu has a solid heft to it, feels expensive right off the bat. This one? Too light. Already a red flag. Then I ran my fingers over the surface. Real Cartier stainless steel is smooth as hell, polished perfectly. This felt slightly rough, almost gritty in spots. Not cool.
Peering Closer
Okay, weight and feel were sus. Time for the magnifying glass. Cartier pays insane attention to detail, right? Fake makers usually screw this up hard.
- The Dial: I focused on the Cartier logo. Legit has sharp, clean engraving. This one? The letters looked blurry around the edges, almost like the tool slipped. Huge tell.
- The Hands: Looked at those sword hands real close. On a real Bleu, they’re immaculate, perfectly shaped. These seemed a bit crooked? The finish wasn’t as clean either.
- The Date Window: Poked my loupe right over it. Real Bleus have a date window with crisp edges, clean-cut. This one looked rough, like it was chiseled out by a shaky hand. And the date numbers inside? Looked fuzzy, not sharp at all.
Flip That Watch Over!
Turned it over to check the case back. This is where fakes usually fall apart completely.
- Engravings: A real Cartier Bleu has laser-precise engravings – model number, water resistance, the serial, “Swiss Made,” all of it. Deep, clear, perfectly spaced. This fake? The engravings were shallow, kinda sloppy looking. The spacing between “Swiss Made” was all wonky. Also, tried reading the fine print… it was blurry mess under my loupe. Gave me a headache.
- Screws: Real case back screws are perfectly flush, sitting tight. Not these. They were a mess. Some stuck out, some seemed sunk in, none looked right.
The Devil’s in the Movement
Couldn’t open it right then (buddy didn’t wanna scratch it more than necessary), but just listening told a story. Wound it gently. A real automatic Cartier has a smooth, quiet, refined tick. This thing? Sounded like a cheap wristwatch on steroids – loud, harsh, kinda gravelly. No way that was the real deal movement inside.
Final Touches… or Lack Thereof
Took a look at the crown and that blue spinel cabochon. Real cabochon is deep, luxurious blue, cut beautifully. This fake? Blue was way too bright, kinda plastic-looking, and the setting around it looked rough. Crown shape felt clunky too.

And the bracelet clasp? Real Cartier clasps click shut with a satisfying, solid snap and open smoothly. This one felt flimsy, weak, and the engraving on it? Same sad story – shallow, kinda fuzzy.
So, That Settled It
Put it all together: weirdly light, rough finish, sloppy dial details, crappy crown, blurry engravings on back, screws sticking out, noisy movement, cheap bracelet feel. Every single one of those little checks screamed fake. Told my buddy, “Run away, fast!” Sharing this because these sneaky fakes are everywhere now. Hopefully walking through exactly what I did helps you dodge a bullet! Stay sharp out there.