Hermès · Authentication

Picotin 18: real vs fake

The Picotin was born from a horse’s feed bag: an open bucket with no flaps or zippers, secured by a pair of leather lock tabs. Its simplicity is deceptive — replicas fail precisely on the tab alignment, the rolled handles, and the raw, unlined interior.

What to check on the Picotin 18

Model-specific zones — on top of the brand-level signs.

Feed-bag silhouette

An open, soft bucket about 18 cm tall that stands on its own without being rigid. The proportions read close to a rounded-bottom cube; a splayed-out or stiff body doesn’t match the model.

Picotin Lock tabs

Two leather tabs with metal plates fold over the top toward each other; the eyelets line up perfectly, and the lock passes through both without skew. Misaligned eyelets are a classic replica failure.

Rolled handles

The two short rolled handles stand upright, dense and springy, with a straight seam along the inner side. Soft, flattened handles or handles of unequal height are a bad sign.

Unlined interior

Inside is the raw reverse of the leather — no fabric lining, no extra pockets. The suede-like surface should be clean and even; a glued-in lining exposes a fake.

Photo angles for the check

  1. 1 Front
  2. 2 Logo / hardware
  3. 3 Interior
  4. 4 Date code
  5. 5 Stitching

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FAQ

There’s no zipper or flap — is that intentional?

Yes, the Picotin is an open tote by design. The top is secured only by the pair of lock tabs (the Picotin Lock version). A zipper or magnetic bar at the opening is foreign to this model.

No lining inside — is that normal?

Completely: the Picotin interior is the raw side of the leather, with no fabric. Look for an even nap and clean edges; a textile lining inside is a reason to doubt the bag.

The bag slouches and softens over time — fake?

No, gentle settling is the model’s character: the Picotin is soft by design and relaxes with wear. What’s worrying isn’t softness but asymmetry — skewed sides or lock tabs whose eyelets no longer meet.