Pictures are often used as stimuli in several fields, such as psychology and neuroscience. However, co-occurring image-related properties might impact their processing, emphasizing the importance of validating such materials to guarantee the quality of research and professional practices. This is particularly relevant for pictures of common items because of their wide applicability potential. Normative studies have already been conducted to create and validate such pictures, yet most of them focused on stimulus without naturalistic elements (e.g., line drawings). Norms for real-world pictures of common items are rare, and their normative examination does not always simultaneously assess affective, semantic and perceptive dimensions, namely in the Portuguese context. Real-world pictures constitute pictorial representations of the world with realistic details (e.g., natural color or position), thus improving their ecological validity and their suitability for empirical studies or intervention purposes. Consequently, the establishment of norms for real-world pictures is mandatory for exploring their ecological richness and to uncover their impact across several relevant dimensions. In this study, we established norms for 596 real-world pictures of common items (e.g., tomato, drum) selected from existing databases and distributed into 12 categories. The pictures were evaluated on nine dimensions by a Portuguese sample. The results present the norms by item, by dimension and their correlations as well as cross-cultural analyses. RealPic is a culturally based dataset that offers systematic and flexible standards and is suitable for selecting stimuli while controlling for confounding effects in empirical tasks and interventional applications.Keywords Norms . Real-world pictures . Affective . Perceptive . Semantic . Cross-cultural analysis Pictures are often used as visual stimuli to access or even improve psychological processes (e.g., Brady et al., 2008;Caramazza & Konkle, 2013). However, pictures are complex stimuli, and their characteristics may influence several cognitive and affective processes (Boukadi et al., 2016;Reppa & McDougall, 2015). Therefore, their careful production and validation are essential to guarantee the quality of experimental and interventional designs and to provide comparable results across studies (see Snodgrass & Vanderwart, 1980). Specifically, the assessment of pictures and their characteristics permits the control of their impact on psychological processes, enabling the systematic manipulation of their relevant properties while reducing bias introduced by similar/ correlated dimensions (Brodeur et al., 2010;Snodgrass & Vanderwart, 1980).Critically, validation endeavors require time and precise procedures. In order to overcome this time-consuming task, several databases have been produced and made available to the scientific community. The seminal work by Snodgrass and Vanderwart (1980) constitutes one of the first/most wellknown databases. Subsequently, several studies replicated and exte...