Babies and infantsįor infants (under three years of age), a photo with an open mouth is acceptable. If you usually wear hearing aids, you can wear them in your passport photo - this applies to adults, children, and infants. Note: vision impairment alone is not an acceptable reason to wear glasses in a passport photo. If you cannot remove your glasses for medical reasons, the frames can’t obscure your eyes and there can’t be any reflection from the lenses. Glasses are not allowed in passport photos. There can’t be any reflection from rings or studs. Jewellery can’t obscure any part of your face, especially the area around your eyes, mouth and nose. The edges of your face on either side also have to be visible. Religious head coverings have to be plain, without patterns (even small patterns), and be worn in a way that shows your face from the bottom of the chin to the top of the forehead. If you usually cover your head for religious reasons, then you can wear the covering in your passport photo. Photos have to be 35mm to 40mm wide and 45mm to 50mm high. The size of the face from chin to crown can be up to a maximum of 36mm, with a minimum of 32mm. Neutral expression (not smiling, laughing or frowning).Hair off your face, so that the edges of your face are visible.Face centred and looking at the camera straight on not tilted in any direction.Uniform lighting (no shadows or reflections), with appropriate brightness and contrast to show natural skin tone.Plain white or light grey background that contrasts with your face.Clear, focused image with no marks or 'red eye'.No retouching of any kind (including removal of background, moles, wrinkles or scars).Two identical, good quality colour prints, less than six months old, produced using dye sublimation, not from an inkjet printer.
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