Carding Guide: End Clothing (Designer & Streetwear)

Carder

Active member
This thread is about carding and your obsession with designer clothes. Half the carders who message me drool over overpriced designer labels. Me? I'm happy in a $10 t-shirt and jeans. But I hear you. You want those Gucci loafers and Balenciaga sweatshirts. So let's talk about End Clothing:

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End Clothing isn’t just another fashion retailer. This UK-based store has become a favourite haunt for fashion lovers from all over the world. They sell everything from high-end designers to street brands, all with price tags that would make the average person wince.

Don’t be arrogant and think this is going to be a walk in the park. End has some protection, but nothing we can’t handle if we’re smart. So get your proxies ready, fire up your anti-detect browsers, and let’s take a look at how to get new threads. We’re all about lookmaxxing without spending our own money.

Why End Clothing?
Let’s break down why End Clothing is worth our time. First off, they ship worldwide. That’s a big deal for you non-US carders out there. Got a UK card? A German one? It doesn’t matter. You can use plastic from your home country, put your shipping address as the invoice, and go to town. This opens up opportunities for carders all over the world.

But it’s not just about easy shipping. End has a huge inventory that any fashion lover would love. We’re talking everything from Yeezys to Moncler jackets. High-priced items mean big payouts for us when we flip those items.

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Another perk? Their customer base is used to spending serious money. A $500 order won’t raise eyebrows like it would on a budget site. That means we can aim for larger shipments without causing alarm.
And let’s not forget the resale potential. End stocks release limited edition collections and collaborations that sell out quickly. Pick one up and you’ll have a product that will sell quickly on the secondary market.

Bottom line: End Clothing’s worldwide shipping, high-value inventory, and resale potential make it a prime target for our work. Whether you’re in New York or New Delhi, there’s money to be made here. So let’s dive in and see how we can turn that designer clothing into cash.

Exploration
Using our trusty Burp or Caido (or even Chrome’s built-in developer tools), we can dig a little deeper into how their entire site works.

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After a little thought—adding items to the cart, going through the registration process, etc.—we can see three obvious things:
  • Firstly, there is no anti-fraud system on their website. This means that posing as a real buyer, browsing their catalog and acting like a normal person will not make a difference. None of your actions are recorded or analyzed to detect fraud.
  • Secondly, they use two payment gateways (Adyen and Braintree) depending on what region you are shopping from. They may show either Adyen or Braintree depending on your shipping location. This fact allows us to adjust our approach depending on which payment gateway we are dealing with.
  • Last but not least, they do not check email addresses when registering. This means that we can use a trick with the email addresses of our trusted cardholders to increase our chances of success when placing an order.

These findings give us a solid foundation to work from. End’s lack of sophisticated fraud detection methods, their dual payment gateway setup, and their email verification controls all provide us with opportunities we can exploit. It’s not a free-for-all, but it’s close enough that with the right approach we can take serious steps.

Requirements
Okay, let’s break down what you need to achieve End Clothing:

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  • Cards - Your card must match the country of your drop. If you are in the US, take it one step further - your card must be from the same state as your drop. This is important to pass basic address verification checks.
    In order to use our cardholder email trick, your card must have a cardholder email address attached. This is the key to making our strategy work. Cards with email addresses attached are great here - they increase your chances of getting hit.
  • Drops - Clean, unused addresses are essential. Ends aren't top-notch security, but they're not complete idiots. A drop with a history of fraudulent orders is as good as it gets.
  • Proxies - Residential proxies that match your card's country are a must. Don't skimp here - a good proxy can make or break your operation.
  • Antidetect Browser - You need a strong setup to hide your digital fingerprint. End doesn't spy on your every move, but your fingerprint is sent along with your card details during checkout, and their payment processors aren't completely blind
  • Spam Emails : If you use the cardholder email trick, make sure you have a way to fill that inbox after you've placed your order.
  • Basic Fashion Knowledge - Know your stuff. If you're selling high-end fashion, at least know the difference between Gucci and Prada. This can come in handy if you need to deal with customer service reps.

Get these basics down and you'll be ready to hit End Clothing. Remember, preparation is half the battle in this game. Skimp on the requirements and you'll be setting yourself up for failure before you even start.

The Process Flow
Here's how we're going to hit End Clothing:

Process Flow.jpg


  1. Set up your environment - launch your anti-detect browser and connect to your residential proxy server.
  2. Browse and add products - act naturally. Add different products to your cart, not just the most expensive ones.
  3. Create an account - If you use the cardholder email trick (and you should), use that email to sign up. No need to verify, remember?
  4. Proceed to checkout - Take your time. Enter data carefully and do not copy and paste.
  5. Sending the order. After you have filled everything in, click the "Send" button.
  6. Immediate action - as soon as your order is processed, raise hell in that inbox. Fill it with spam to bury all confirmation emails.
  7. Watch and wait. Wait for confirmation of sending.

If you’re getting a 3DS pop-up during checkout, it’s a sign that your fraud score may be too high. Your first step should be to try a different card or change your settings entirely. If the 3DS keeps locking you out, it’s time to bring out the big guns: your Non-VBV cards. These bad boys should slide right through without triggering the 3DS.

Remember, this isn’t a sprint. Take your time, stay calm, and don’t rush the process. Panicky carders make mistakes, and mistakes cost money. Follow this process, adapt as needed, and you’ll be wearing designer clothes before you know it.

Final Thoughts
By the time you master End Clothing, you’ll be throwing down designer clothes faster than a Kardashian on a shopping spree. It’s a gold mine if you play it smart — worldwide shipping, expensive gear, and enough security holes to drive a truck through.

Remember, success here isn’t just about cards or credentials. It's about grace. Take your time, learn the flow, and don't be greedy. Before you know it, you'll be drowning in Yeezys and Gucci loafers.

Just don't come crying to me when you realize all that overpriced stuff doesn't make you cool.

Now go make me proud, fashion-obsessed carders.
 
Yo, Carder, absolute fire on this End Clothing breakdown — I've been lurking these threads for months, piecing together scraps from half-baked PMs and Discord leaks, but your guide? It's the blueprint I've been praying for. That Adyen/Braintree roulette based on drop location? Nasty curveball; caught me off-guard on a few runs last quarter, turning what should've been clean $600 flips into instant declines. Scouting with Burp Suite or even just F12 dev tools to sniff out the payment endpoint before committing? Genius move. No more guessing games — I've bookmarked that workflow and already stress-tested it on a dummy session. Props for calling out the session persistence too; those ephemeral cookies are the silent killer if you're not rotating fingerprints right.

I've been deep in the streetwear resell grind for pushing two years now — started with low-hanging fruit like Supreme box logos on Grailed, but leveled up to designer drops when I realized the margins on Yeezy slides (up to 3x on GOAT during restocks) and Balenciaga triple S sneakers (those chunky bois still move for $800+ if you hit the right colorway) are stupid profitable. End's lineup syncs perfect with my flow: Fear of God Essentials hoodies, Off-White tees, and those Acne Studios leather jackets that scream "quiet luxury" but resell like they're dipped in hype sauce. Your emphasis on "act natural" is spot on — rushing carts is how noobs get blacklisted faster than a bad Tinder swipe. I've seen crews burn entire BIN rotations because they treated the site like an ATM instead of a slow-burn heist.

Lemme drop a war story to illustrate: Back in July (prime summer drop szn), I targeted SSENSE for a similar high-end vibe — global shipping, minimal AVS headaches if you match billing zones. Had a fresh Polish BIN (5xxx prefix, non-VBV, pulled from a quiet EU generator), paired with a Warsaw resi proxy from a vetted provider (shoutout to ProxyRack's elite tier; $20/month but zero datacenter flags). Carted three Moncler puffer vests ($400 ea., total $1.2k) thinking I'd flex, but ego got the best of me — slammed it all in one go without a warm-up. Mid-checkout, bam: 3DS challenge pops like a bad ex texting at 2am. Card ghosts, session nuked, and their fraud radar pings my IP chain. Lesson learned: Switched to a UK BIN next round (4xxx London elite, always gold for End's Euro bias), dropped to a single $450 item first (some boring-ass Common Projects Achilles sneakers to test waters), then layered on the haul 24 hours later via a new incog profile. Shipped to a Manchester drop I'd prepped — clean Airbnb reship, no cameras, paid in BTC via a mule. Hit? Clean as a whistle. Pro move I layered on: Flood the CH email with junk using a custom Python SMTP blaster (here's the gist if anyone's scripting: import smtplib; loop over a list of 100 fake domains with random subjects like "Your Amazon Order #fake123" – blasts 50+ in 60 secs, buries the confo email in noise. Cardholder dismisses it as spam overload 9/10 times).

Building on your antidetect recs, if you're running barebones, step it up with Multilogin or Incogniton — but don't sleep on VMWare snapshots for rollback gold. I spin up a fresh Ubuntu VM per campaign, snapshot pre-hit, then nuke post-order if any red flags (like unusual JS challenges). Pair that with a hardware spoof (e.g., fake WebGL via extensions) and you're ghosting their behavioral analytics. For drops, you nailed the "clean only" rule — I've sourced mine via Telegram channels like @reshiphub (low-key, vetted drops in 20+ cities, $50-100 setup fee but zero drama). US cards? Always same-state match to skirt AVS — e.g., Cali BIN to LA drop. International? EU bins shine for End's UK base; test with a $50 probe order first (socks or beanies, whatever's impulse-buy cheap).

Warm-up sessions are non-negotiable in my playbook: Fire up the browser, idle for 10-15 mins scrolling irrelevant crap — men's grooming kits, women's activewear, even their sale bin tees. Add a $20 filler to cart, remove it, browse shipping options without committing. Builds a "human" session trail that fools their ML models (I've A/B tested this; warm-ups boost approval 40% on average). Canvas fingerprinting? Block it upstream with uBlock tweaks or a dedicated extension like Canvas Defender — End's been ramping that since Q2.

Hit rates? Yours tracks mine — post-guide, I'm at 72% on 15 orders (small N, but consistent: 8/11 on EU bins, 3/4 on US). That 3DS whisper? Abort every time; I've salvaged two by pivoting to non-3DS German bins (3xxx, Berlin drops ftw — proxy from a Vodafone mobile for that extra resi flavor). Greed's the real boss-level enemy, though: Cap $800-1k per hit solo, or scale to $2-3k with a 2-man crew (one scouts/ carts, other monitors drops). Over $1.5k? Velocity flags kick in hard — wait 48-72 hrs between pops on the same BIN family.

On collab drops: Fear of God x Adidas restocks? Worth the smoke if you're reselling — those Essentials track pants flipped for 2.5x on StockX last drop, but yeah, hyper-monitored. Their bot mitigation's tighter than a Kardashian waist trainer; use a residential mobile proxy (4G/5G rotation) and stagger your entry during the frenzy. Tested it twice: First run, got the pair but ate a manual review delay (3 days, risky). Second, bailed on the cart when Burp flagged an extra CAPTCHA layer — switched to a quieter Palm Angels drop same day, smoother sail. Hype's real, but patience pays.

Anyone else grinding this lately? Drop your go-to BIN prefixes (EU/US split?), proxy providers that don't flake, or even antidetect configs if you're sharing. What's the word on End's Black Friday prep — any leaks on promo codes or gateway shifts? Let's stack these W's without feeding the feds. Fashion heists only, no Ls.
 
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