Carousell uses a few trust signals that can look similar but serve different purposes. First, there’s basic account verification—confirming your email and phone number—which helps secure your account but doesn’t always grant a prominent badge. The one most people ask about is identity verification: proving who you are by submitting a government ID and a quick face check in the app. That’s the badge that reassures buyers you’re a real person behind the profile. You might also encounter other trust cues: a strong rating history, “fast responder” labels, or enabling Carousell Protection (escrow for safer transactions). These are not the same as identity verification, but they complement it. Put simply: basic verification protects your login, identity verification builds buyer trust with a visible signal, and positive activity signals (ratings, response time, on-platform payments) show you’re reliable in practice. Aim to stack these signals. Together, they make you stand out in a busy, price-sensitive marketplace like Carousell HK.
Before you start, update the Carousell app to the latest version and find a well-lit, quiet place. Have your valid HKID or passport ready. Then open the app, go to your profile (the “Me” tab), and look for Settings or Account. You should see an option labeled something like “Verification,” “Verify identity,” or “ID verification.” Tap through and choose your document type. The flow typically asks you to photograph your ID and complete a short liveness or selfie check. Follow the on-screen framing guides carefully—keep the document flat, edges visible, and your face centered without filters. Submit, and you’ll get a confirmation that your documents are under review. Reviews often finish within minutes, though it can take longer during busy periods. Once approved, the verification badge appears on your profile automatically. If you’re prompted to confirm your phone or email along the way, do that too—it’s quick and sometimes required before identity checks. That’s it: one clean run and you’re set.
If it was a gift, the best route is to involve the original purchaser because refunds typically go back to the original payment method. Without the purchaser, some boutiques may offer exchanges only, and only within the stated window. For items bought abroad and brought into Hong Kong, policies vary by region; you might get help at an HK boutique, but many returns need to go through the original country of purchase unless the situation involves a defect.
Don’t lose momentum if “refund” isn’t on the table. Ask about an exchange for a different size, strap, or model, or store credit if that suits you better. If the issue is functional or cosmetic but fixable, leverage Cartier’s after‑sales service and warranty; a proper repair or adjustment can make the piece perfect without any extra cost to you when covered. For gifts that missed the mark, a neutral option—like store credit—lets the recipient choose later.
The fastest way to improve a car sketch is to nail the wheels. Start with a ground line so your car has somewhere to sit. Place wheel centers along that line, mark equal diameters, and use light boxes to contain your ellipses. In perspective, ellipses squash: the farther wheel appears smaller and more flattened, but both share the same wheelbase and track guidelines. Check alignment by dropping light plumb lines from body features to the wheel centers; a confident stance comes from consistent geometry, not guesswork.
If perspective feels intimidating, simplify your scene to a horizon line and two vanishing points. A clean 3/4 view is just a box in two-point perspective with curved surfaces layered on. Position the horizon at driver eye level and let the car’s long axes converge faintly toward the vanishing points. Door cuts, beltline, and bumper heights should all echo those convergences. When in doubt, turn the car into a transparent wireframe briefly; this lets you check that left and right sides agree before you commit to ink or darker graphite.
Modern cars are rolling computers, which means your kk should include a digital layer. Keep your car's app updated if it has one; remote lock, scheduled charging, service reminders, and over-the-air updates can all run through your phone. Understand what the update notes mean and do not delay safety-related patches. If you drive an EV or hybrid, learn the basics of battery health: avoid habitually arriving home at 0% or parking at 100% for days, and use scheduled charging to hit your target just before departure when possible.