H. Moser & Cie is not Rolex. Not Patek. This is precisely why it attracts counterfeiters of a certain level. The public who knows it is smaller, the points of comparison less obvious for ordinary mortals, and yet the prices are high - an Endeavor Perpetual Calendar costs between 35,000 and 80,000 euros new.
Result: an H. Moser & Cie imitation can sell for 800, 1,200, sometimes 2,000 euros to someone who thinks they are getting a deal on an “authentic second-hand item”. The margins are enormous. And the victims, often people who discover the brand, do not have the reflexes of a seasoned collector.
The H. Moser smoked dial is the signature of the house. Not a simple gradient — a texture, a depth, something that changes depending on the angle and the light. The shades vary: midnight blue, forest green, burgundy, steel gray. On the original, you feel like you're looking into something, not at something.
That's where it gets stuck. Always. Certain H. Moser & Cie models incorporate a dial in Vantablack — this material which absorbs 99.965% of visible light. Basically, it's a black hole on the wrist. Look inside: you don't see a surface, you see an absence. Chinese copies? They shine. A little bit, but they shine. It's unacceptable. Counterfeiters use an ordinary matte black paint — Vantablack is patented, expensive, and completely inaccessible to the counterfeiting industry.
As for the classic smoky, it's not a Photoshop gradient. It is a vaporous depth, obtained by a long and delicate galvanic treatment. If you see a sharp transition, a flat effect or "pixels" under magnifying glass: run away. Frankly, a 10x magnifying glass on the dial settles the debate in three seconds.
"I put the watch under a desk lamp, tilted at 45 degrees. The dial was like a sheet of wallpaper. No life. I knew then."— story of a deceived buyer, watch forum, 2025
Another detail on the H. Moser dial: the almost total absence of text. It’s a brand philosophy. No omnipresent logo, no big “Swiss Made”, no unnecessary mentions. Fake H. Mosers often miss this minimalism — either by adding text that shouldn't be there, or by mispositioning the house's discreet signature. On a real Moser, visual silence is itself a marker of authenticity.
H. Moser & Cie manufactures its own calibers. Entirely. Internally. Schaffhausen, Switzerland. This is even one of their strongest marketing arguments: they are one of the few independents to produce right down to the mainspring.
An original H. Moser movement - let's take the HMC 200 caliber or the HMC 327 for the perpetuals - is of a rare finish. Hand beveling, deep and regular Geneva ribs, spiral at the bottom of the box. The decks are usually made of nickel silver, finished with a rigor that you can almost feel to the touch. The double hairspring balance in Straumann AllBlue is another signature: flexible, precise, and completely absent from counterfeits.
On a fake H. Moser & Cie, the movement is almost systematically a generic Chinese blank or a reworked ETA. The rotor is often heavier and less fluid. The finishes are mechanical, without soul — the dimensions are regular but too perfect, without the slight variation of handwork. And if you have access to the caliber reference, a simple search confirms or denies it in thirty seconds.
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