On the other hand I used to know a guy who wore a President Day-Date. He told everyone it was a cheap copy. Good idea as there are areas where they would cut off your hand to get a $10,000 watch.

I am currently wearing a Rolex Explorer II look alike. Jeweled automatic movement, solid stainless steel case. The bracelet is cheap junk (replaced it with a leather strap which is much more comfortable in the cold), but the watch is great. Cost $50 including sending it back to Hong Kong for a repair. However, I bet a real Rolex is twice the watch this is --for 100x the money.

graywolf
http://www.graywolfphoto.com
http://webpages.charter.net/graywolf
"Idiot Proof" <==> "Expert Proof"
-----------------------------------


Paul Stenquist wrote:
I showed my Rolex Daytona to a bartender in my LA hotel a few years back. I went to bed that night and left it on the nightstand. When I woke up the next day, it was gone. Too bad, It was one of the nicest, most authentic counterfeits I've ever seen. Paid $35 for it on New York's Canal Street.
Paul
On Feb 24, 2006, at 6:40 PM, Bob Shell wrote:


On Feb 24, 2006, at 6:26 PM, Godfrey DiGiorgi wrote:

On Feb 24, 2006, at 3:13 PM, Cotty wrote:

When someone asks me what kind of camera I have, I just reply: "Three
grand", because let's face it, that's ultimately what every Joe wants to know.


Now that's practical.



Not sure I'd recommend that. You could be talking to a thief, or be overheard by one, you know. Better to say something like, "Oh, just some old thing I dragged out of the closet".

A few years ago a friend of mine was talking to the bell captain at a hotel where he had stopped in to look around for possible interesting photo locations. They got to talking about cameras, and he showed the bell captain his Leica gear from inside his camera bag. They talked a bit longer, and then he left and walked home. As he unlocked the door of his apartment he was hit over the head with some sort of club and came to to find himself tied up and some guy ransacking his apartment. All of his camera gear and a bunch of other stuff was taken, and it took him hours to get someone's attention and get free. He recognized the thief as someone he'd noticed hanging out in the hotel lobby.

Not only did he lose all his camera gear and some other valuable things, he had problems for several years from where he was hit on the head. He died, and I've never been sure the head injury wasn't a contributing factor.

With camera gear as expensive as it has gotten, you can't be too careful who you let know its value.

Bob




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