How to photograph your collection

Want a valuation of coins, banknotes or medals? Send us good photographs and we can advise you faster and better. You don't need to be a professional — a few basic rules suffice. Here is how to do it.

Details that matter

One coin — how to do it

Well-lit coin
Right

Detail visible

Even fine detail is visible on the coin — scratches, hairlines and so on.

Photographed with flash — glare
Wrong

No detail visible on the coin

Badly lit can sometimes be worse than too little light. Shoot without flash where possible.

Several pieces at once

Badges laid out clearly
Perfect

Clearly laid out

Our experts can read the layout within seconds and pick out rare pieces.

Shot through an album
Wrong

Out-of-focus photo

The photo is out of focus and the album sleeve glares — nothing can be identified. Where possible, check your photos before sending them.

Ideal example of a bulk shot

Mixed coins, view 1
Neatly laid out, no glare — we recognise the type immediately.
Mixed coins, view 2
The other side of the coins — the years of issue — helps identify rare and sought-after pieces.

Banknotes — always both obverse and reverse

Banknotes, reverse
Obverse

Banknotes — reverse

On a single photo, with the series and numbering legible. Perfect.

Banknotes, obverse
Reverse

Banknotes — obverse

The other side matters too. Where possible, photograph both sides.

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