Yeezy · Authentication
450: real vs fake
The Yeezy 450 debuted in 2021 in the Cloud White colorway and stands out with its claw-like midsole, whose prongs wrap up onto the knitted sock upper. The geometry of those prongs and the fit of the one-piece knit are exactly what replica factories cannot reproduce precisely.
What to check on the 450
Model-specific zones — on top of the brand-level signs.
Claw midsole geometry
The original’s prongs have a tuned length and thickness with equal gaps, and their tips taper smoothly. On fakes the claws are shorter or thicker, the spacing is uneven and the tips look chopped off.
Prong fit against the upper
On an authentic pair the midsole prongs hug the knit upper along their full length with no gaps or glue runs. Lifting tips and glue on the knit are typical replica defects.
One-piece knit sock upper
The 450 upper is knitted as a single sock with a dense, even weave and an elastic collar. Loose knitting, thread floats and a coarse collar seam give a fake away.
Profile and pair symmetry
The original silhouette is low, with a smooth line from toe to heel; the claw pattern mirrors exactly between the left and right shoe. Asymmetrical prongs are a quick fake marker.
Sole foam texture
The lightweight foam midsole on the original is matte, with smooth, clean molding. Gloss, flash along the prong edges and grinding marks point to a makeshift mold.
Photo angles for the check
- 1 Overall view
- 2 Logo
- 3 Interior tag
- 4 Outsole
- 5 Box label
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FAQ
The 450 upper stretches a lot — is that normal?
Yes, the one-piece knit pulls on like a sock and is noticeably elastic — that is a design feature. What matters is that the knit stays dense under stretch, with no open windows or floats; a loose weave is a replica sign.
Which angles matter most when checking a 450?
Close-ups of both shoes’ sides (claw geometry and symmetry), a top view of the knit upper and collar, and the outsole from below. Shoot the prong-to-upper joint at an angle — gaps and glue show best that way.