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Paulrosenbach.com, Moniquemeijer.nl, Mariefragonoir.com, Claudemartin.com: At first glance, online stores look exactly the same. They all promise the same thing – sustainable, long-lasting fashion. Only the location is different: fashion comes once from Zurich, another time from Amsterdam (Netherlands) or Paris (F). However, the garment is neither sustainable nor durable. On the contrary: it is produced cheaply in China.
Blick reported the case of Giulia H.* (40) earlier in the week: he had not received real Nike shoes with daisies when he ordered them from the online store Paulrosenbach.com—allegedly an online store for Swiss fashion. It’s just a corrupt copy. “I knew right away: It was a bad buy,” said the Blick reader.
Hong Kong companies
Blick research now shows that the operator of Paulrosenbach.com operates similar counterfeit shops across Europe. The online store “Monique Meijer” allegedly from the Netherlands is exactly the same. Likewise, “Claude Martin” and “Marie Fragonoir”, both allegedly from France.
According to the imprint, the same companies are always behind a large number of online shops: “MB Consulting Ltd.” and «Accessories and Designs Ltd.». Both have their address in Hong Kong.
Striking: “Acessoires & Designs Ltd.” on Paulrosenbach.com on Monday. was stated as the responsible company, the other company is included in the imprint after the Blick report. No companies can be found in the Swiss business register – this does not bode well.
In the case of the online store Mariefragonoir.com, allegedly from Paris, the scam is particularly obvious: the URL leads to an online store called Claude Martin. If the URL and store name don’t match, it’s a clear sign of a fake store.
The texts on local production, sustainability and longevity on the site are formulated exactly the same for all stores. They were just translated. Instead of Zurich there is either Paris or Amsterdam, instead of Switzerland there is France or the Netherlands.
strange phone number
Although the tags of the shops allegedly from Amsterdam and Paris do not give the same responsible company, they give the same phone number. This leads to another dubious online store: Norahansen.com.
A Norwegian fashion house as the website promises. The logo looks a little different from the others. But at second glance the situation is clear. Same stitch. In this case, the print is completely missing. The phone number can only be found in the small print of the terms and conditions.
*Name changed
Source :Blick

I’m Tim David and I work as an author for 24 Instant News, covering the Market section. With a Bachelor’s Degree in Journalism, my mission is to provide accurate, timely and insightful news coverage that helps our readers stay informed about the latest trends in the market. My writing style is focused on making complex economic topics easy to understand for everyone.