Why QC photos are your only real protection
The single most important habit in rep buying is never paying for a pair you haven't seen photographed first. QC — quality check — photos are images of your exact pair, not stock catalogue shots, taken before the shoe ships. Every reputable source provides them. If a seller won't, that alone tells you to stop. The seven checks below are what to actually look for once those photos land in your chat.
The 7 checks, in order of importance
1. Stitching. Look for even, tight stitches that follow the panel lines cleanly. Wavy, loose or lifting stitching is the most common budget-batch tell. 2. Leather grain and stiffness. Good rep leather has the right pebbled texture and structure; too smooth or too soft means a cheaper material. 3. Sole paint and shape. Check that paint stays inside the moulding lines and the sole shape matches reference photos. 4. Logo placement. Scale, spacing and position should match retail — this is where many cheap pairs slip. 5. Box and accessories. Correct box proportions, labels and extra laces signal a top batch. 6. Overall proportions. Step back and check the silhouette doesn't look squashed or deflated. 7. The named batch. A seller who names the batch and prices it accordingly is being straight with you.
What each check looks like on a real pair
On a Jordan 1, the leather check is decisive — retail uses tumbled leather that creases softly, while a budget rep uses stiff, plasticky material that creases sharply and wrong. On a Dunk, the panel shape and leather grain matter most. On moulded shoes like Yeezy Foam Runners or Slides, there's almost nothing to fail, which is why they're a safe first buy. On designer pieces, the logo work and — for chunky sneakers — the sole stack are where batches separate. Match your scrutiny to the silhouette: simpler shoes need fewer checks, complex ones need all seven.
When to walk away
One minor issue on a forgiving silhouette is usually fine. Two or more failures, or any single major flaw on a hyped pair that will be inspected, means request a different pair or cancel. A good seller reshoots from another pair rather than pushing a flawed one. The cost of walking away is a few minutes; the cost of accepting a bad pair is a return, a resale complaint, or an obviously-off shoe you can't wear. The checks take thirty seconds — use them every time.
Written by Marco — sourcing lead, Shoe-Wholesale. Reviewed June 2026 against our own shipments. No invented statistics or fake reviews — just what we've learned sourcing and shipping these shoes.