A careful review of The Dalmore 21 Year Old Older Bottling begins with the bottle in front of you, not a generic price list. Clear evidence helps separate the release, condition and packaging before any next step is discussed.
Confirm the exact bottle
For The Dalmore 21 Year Old Older Bottling, record the wording on the front and rear labels, stated age or edition, bottle capacity, alcohol strength, bottling clues and any serial, cask or batch reference that is actually visible. If two details conflict or cannot be read, mark them as unresolved instead of filling the gap from another listing.
Title-specific identity points
Keep the complete “The Dalmore 21 Year Old Older Bottling” release wording visible and do not merge it with another presentation from The Dalmore. The 21 Year Old wording is an age statement, not a calendar year; photograph it exactly as printed. The release wording includes Older Bottling; keep the full wording visible instead of shortening it to a generic edition name.
Document condition and packaging
Start with uncropped views of every side, then add close-ups of the closure, label edges, fill level, bottle base and any printed code. Reflections and filters can hide useful details, so neutral light and sharp focus are preferable. Keep the brand name and all release wording readable in the same uncropped photo sequence.
Compare like with like
When reviewing previous records, separate auction, retail and dealer contexts and note the date and currency. Similar names can cover different releases, so evidence that does not show the exact version should remain contextual only. For this product, match the stated 21 Year Old age, the bottling-period clues, the closure and bottle format, and the complete Older Bottling wording before treating another record as comparable.
For broader release context, browse the Dalmore whisky edition guide. The collection helps locate related editions, while the bottle-level evidence above still controls identification.
Photo checklist
- Uncropped views of the bottle from all sides
- Closure, labels, fill level and bottle base
- Box, insert, certificate and other included items
- Close-ups of damage, leakage or uncertain markings
Review process and next step
Read the whisky buyback review process, check the buyback FAQ, then use the valuation contact page to submit photographs. An initial photo review records visible evidence only; final identification and terms remain subject to physical inspection.