Why QC Photos Are Non-Negotiable
In W2C, you cannot physically inspect a product before it ships from China. QC photos are 6-15 photographs taken by your buying agent of the actual item sitting in their warehouse. They are your only opportunity to verify the product before it embarks on a 10-20 day international journey. Skipping QC review is the most common reason W2C buyers receive disappointing orders.
The Universal QC Checklist
Apply these checks to every item regardless of category:
Colorway accuracy — does it match the RizzitGO listing and official reference photos?
Logo and text — spelling correct, placement accurate, font matches original?
Stitching — even spacing, no loose threads, no puckering at seams?
Material texture — does the fabric/leather look consistent with the listed product?
Tags and labels — correct hang tags, wash care labels, size tags?
Symmetry — both sides of the item consistent (especially footwear)?
Condition — no scratches, discoloration, or damage from warehouse handling?
Sneaker QC: Specific Checks
Footwear from RizzitGO requires the most careful QC review. Beyond the universal checklist, check: toe box shape matches reference, heel tab height is correct, outsole edge dye is clean (no bleeding), insole branding is present and legible, upper texture matches the silhouette's known material, lace hole spacing is even, and the shoe box label matches the size and colorway ordered.
Ask your agent for a "sole shot" and a "toe box from above" angle if not included in the standard QC pack. Good agents like KakoBuy provide these on request at no extra cost.
Apparel QC: What to Look For
For hoodies, T-shirts, jackets, and other apparel from RizzitGO's clothing categories:
When to Reject Your QC
Reject your QC (and request a swap or refund) if you see: wrong colorway or size sent, significant logo misalignment (more than 3mm), visible stitching gaps on major seams, obvious material downgrade vs listing photos, any clear structural damage. Do not reject for very minor imperfections that will not be visible when worn — this is W2C and perfect factory-matching is rare. But do reject if something is clearly wrong.