1. The portrait of Selma Lagerlöf is an engraving from a
photograph taken in 1922. A Värmland landscape can be
glimpsed in the background.
2. The introduction to Gösta Berling's Saga is from the
original manuscript. The initial letter is from the first
edition of the book.
3. There is an engraved horse and carriage, with Selma
Lagerlöf herself as one of the passengers.
4. A brief extract from Gösta Berling's Saga. The
vertical micro lettering describes the Värmland landscape.
5. A passage from Nils Holgersson's Wonderful Journey
through Sweden, when Nils flies over the flatlands of
Skåne, southern Sweden.
6. The background of arable and pastureland consists of
various machine-drawn guilloche patterns - fine lines -
using offset printing.
The notes measure 67 x 120 millimetres.


2. Notes from Vincenzo Bellini's opera Norma.
3. A drawing of Stockholm's old opera house.
4. The micro lettering is a quotation from composer
Arnold Schoenberg.
5. An excerpt from the score of Sven-David Sandström's
Pictures for Percussion and Orchestra.
6. The background depicts a stylised view of a Swedish
landscape.
7. A picture of a silver harp and its tonal range.
Measurement: 77 x 120 millimetres. The note was
introduced in 1996.


1. The main motif is a portrait of the naturalist Carl von
Linné.
2. Linné's motto in very small letters.
3. A sketch of the Linnaeus garden in Uppsala.
4. Sketches of pollinating plants taken from Linné's work
in 1729.
5. A foil strip with a hologram (three-dimensional image)
showing the denomination and three crowns.
6. A pattern that, together with the pattern on the reverse
of the note, forms an image showing the denomination of the
note when you hold the banknote up to the light.
7. Drawing of a bee pollinating a flower from a photograph
by Lennart Nilsson.
8. The background consists of stylised pictures from the
fertilisation of a flower.
9. A reconstruction of how the flower looks through the
multifaceted eyes of a bee.
Measurements: 72 x 140 millimetres.


1. Portrait of Karl XI from 1682.
2. The Riksbank's first building on Järntorget in Stockholm.
3. The Riksbank´s motto in very small letters.
4. A foil strip with a hologram (three-dimensional image)
showing the
denomination and three crowns.
5. A pattern that, together with the pattern on the reverse
of the
note, forms an image showing the denomination of the note
when you hold the banknote up to the light.
6. Drawing of Christopher Polhem, the father of Swedish
engineering.
7. Mathematical calculations from one of Polhem's notebooks.
8. Falu copper mine with one of Polhem's ore hauling plants.
9. The gear wheel is from Polhem's industrial plant in
Dalarna.
Measurements: 82 x 150 millimetres.


1. The main motif is a portrait of Gustav Vasa.
2. One of the rings includes a quotation from Gustav Vasa in
micro lettering.
3. A detail from the parhelion painting, the oldest painting of
Stockholm.
4. The rings symbolise an atmospheric phenomenon that occurred
in 1535.
5. The sun contains a hidden picture, a half-moon that shines
under ultraviolet light. On some banknotes the half-moon is
barely visible or not visible at all. In such cases it is
particularly important to check other security features.
6. A harvest picture from Olaus Magnus' Description of the
Northern Peoples from 1555.
Measurement: 82 x 160 mm. The note was introduced in 1989
10-krona
5 krona
2 krona
1 krona
50-öre
1000 krona
100 krona
500 krona
50 krona
20 krona
1.00 EUR 歐元 = 9.28259 SEK 瑞典克朗
1 HKD = 0.901690 SEK 1 SEK = 1.10903 HKD