About Artmink
Artmink transforms images of antiques and collectibles into appraisal reports, narrated presentations, and shareable item experiences.
Artmink began as a way to identify and assess art, antiques, vintage items, and collectibles from images. It is becoming a full object workflow: draft the appraisal, refine the evidence, export the report, narrate the story, and let viewers ask focused questions about the item.
The goal is not to replace the expertise of dealers, appraisers, or collectors. The goal is to make expertise easier to draft, review, publish, and explain.
Who it is for
Three overlapping user roles
Dealers
Use Artmink to move from item images to listing-ready copy, narrated presentation assets, public channels, and website widgets.
Appraisers
Use Artmink to generate a draft report, deepen it with research and comparables, and export a polished PDF with supporting visuals.
Collectors
Use Artmink to identify objects, spot red flags, understand value ranges, and decide what deserves a closer look.
FAQ style preview
Questions Artmink should answer clearly
Can AI appraise antiques from photos?
Yes. AI can generate a strong first-pass appraisal from images, especially for identification, description, condition cues, inscriptions, and broad value framing. The strongest results pair image analysis with research, specialist review, and human judgment.
What is the difference between auction value and replacement value?
Auction liquidation value reflects what an object may bring in a relatively fast-sale auction setting. Replacement value is usually higher and reflects the cost of replacing the object through a retail or insurance-oriented channel.
Guide preview
What makes a good comparable?
A good comparable is not just a similar-looking object. It is a documented market example with a clear title, source, date, price, and relevance to the item being assessed. Good comparables explain value. Weak comparables merely decorate it.