mbjoer:
Good comments and good observations. You always notice more when looking at a blown up photo of the dial than you do looking at the dial itself 6 inches in front of your nose.
I have been getting tired of photographing stainless steel subs and their variations and tired of looking at them so I have deliberately been searching for more unusual watches to try to photograph well. I don't like every watch I photograph and don't try to photograph just watches I happen to like. I am not offended if most people don't like some of them either. I am just trying to take photographs worth looking at of some watches which are different than the ones so commonly seen here. I am trying to add some visual variety to the photos found here.
I do have some answers to your observations.
The guilleoche in the centre of the dial seems to fade because it is very shallow guilleoche all across the dial; not because the center is any different than the edge. Just too shallow (or protrudes too little) to show good shadow across the dial.
Probably due to a cheapness in manufacture. As you note, this is not a high quality piece of work.
Much better guilleoche work can be seen here:
and here:
The work on some reps is just better than the work on other reps.
Also, the back will never fool anyone. I suppose a see through back will alway be a bad idea when you are putting an inexpensive Chinese movement inside!
Finally, few people will even know what a Breguet watch is. The name will mean nothing to most people so in that context it could be a nice plain simple little watch to wear and enjoy. But I certainly would never try to pass it off as a true Breguet to anyone knowledgeable. In contrast, a BKLM/WM9 YM could be passed off as a gen to 99.99% of the public as long as they didn't open the case back.
I too feel this watch would work better if the Breguet name was not on it. Then it would be seen for the positive values it contains. Now it is seen as a "cheap rep."