Examples/Sports Memorabilia
Your sports memorabilia
deserves better than a shoebox of COAs.
Signatures, certificates, photos, values — every piece kept with its proof. No more digging through a manila envelope to find the LOA.
Game-Worn Cap · Babe Ruth · 1927
One record. The signature, the cert, the provenance — all kept with the piece.Game-Worn Cap · Babe Ruth · 1927
Snap · Drop · Or scan COA
Frame reads JSA, PSA/DNA, Beckett, and MLB Authentication holograms — player, year, type, authenticator, cert. Edit any field before saving; unauthenticated pieces track the same way — flag as pending.
02 — Quick add
Snap the COA. Frame fills the rest.
Photograph a certificate and Frame reads it — player, team, year, type, authenticator, cert number. Confirm in two seconds; correct anything that's off. Adding a new piece stops being a chore.
- Reads JSA, PSA/DNA, Beckett, MLB Auth, Hunt Auctions holograms and letters
- Unauthenticated pieces track the same way — flag as pending until the COA arrives
03 — Ask Frame
Ask your collection anything. In plain English.
Talk to your case. Frame answers from your own data — player, year, type, authenticator, paid, value — and can act on what it finds. Pull a pending-auth queue, build an insurance schedule, or assemble a Yankees-only showcase without writing a single formula.
- Filter by anything in your columns — player, team, authenticator, paid, value
- Turn answers into actions: submission queues, insurance riders, exports
04 — Sharing
Insurance-ready links — read-only, no account needed.
Send your carrier a link to the whole case or just the scheduled-items. They can browse, sort, and verify certs — but never edit. Hide paid prices for an appraiser, show them for a buyer, expire the link when the policy renews.
- Per-link visibility: paid, est. value, cert numbers, storage location
- Revoke or expire any link instantly without affecting your data
Every piece. Every certificate. One view.
Built for how sports memorabilia are actually tracked.
Sports memorabilia is only as valuable as its authentication. Frame's fields put authenticator (PSA/DNA, JSA, Beckett, MLB Auth) front and center, with a yes/no flag so you can instantly filter what's verified vs what's pending. Player, team, year, and type let you sort by era or athlete. Photos and COA scans attach to the piece, not a folder.
Outcomes, not features.
- 01
Filter authenticated vs unauthenticated to prioritize what to send out for COAs
- 02
Sort by player or team to surface gaps in your collection
- 03
Attach the COA scan to the piece so they never get separated
- 04
Export PDF for insurance scheduled-items riders
- 05
Share a read-only view with potential buyers without exposing your whole collection
Common questions.
Which authenticators does Frame support?+
Any. The Authenticator field is free text — PSA/DNA, JSA, Beckett, MLB Auth, Hunt Auctions, Steiner, Tristar, Mounted Memories, and historical letters all work. Frame doesn't enforce a fixed list because the authentication market changes; we let you record what's actually on the certificate.
Can I track items I authenticated through Topps Now or fanatics in-house?+
Yes. Enter the authenticator name as it appears on the certificate. Many collectors add a tag like 'in-house' or 'third-party' to filter the difference quickly.
What about game-used vs game-worn items?+
Use the Type field to differentiate. Common conventions: 'Game-Used Bat', 'Game-Worn Jersey', 'Player-Worn Cap'. Or add a tag for the level of use documentation you have.
How do I value memorabilia for insurance?+
Most collectors use recent comparable sales from PWCC, Heritage, or Goldin. Enter the value, attach the comp source as a note, and re-value annually. The PDF export includes your valuation methodology — adjusters appreciate the audit trail.
Can I track items I'm consigning?+
Yes. Add a tag like 'consigned' or 'auction-pending' and a note with the auction house and lot number. Filter by tag to see what's currently in play.
Other collections worth tracking.
Start your sports memorabilia record.
Free to start. Every field, photo, and document organized where it belongs.