Forget the roof pools and drink frost.
The “IT” summer activity in the city is collecting miniature art prints from old -fashioned currency.
“So fun,” said Kiana Ting, 25, who works in data analytics in the beauty industry and lives in Manhattan.
There are an increasing number to come to collect 2.5-inch color images, known as incriad prints. The first car by distributing them was installed at the Whitney Museum at the end of 2023. Now there are 65 across the country, including 11 in New York City – in places running from Warby Parker in Soho in Brooklyn Brewery in Williamsburg in a new in Barclays Center, where fans have been waiting for ove. Liberty last games – and one in catskills.
Machines are coming soon to Rosemary’s, an Italian restaurant in West Village, and ATHENA KEKE’s, a new sports bar for women opening in Clinton Hill
Fans insert four quarters into a car to get one of the eight prints randomly. Owners of the scene must choose which press their machinery offers from a library of 150, while some points offer exclusive custom prints.
Recently ting was trained to visit all six print cars in Brooklyn in one day.
“Foster sundry in Bushwick has a car with food theme prints, and I love pickles, sardines and blue cheese prints I got there,” she said.
Laura Harrison, 60, a reviewer of independent children’s books living in White Plains, is obsessed with print collection.
“I have probably 500,” she told the post. “Once you get in [them]You want to get as much as you can. “She believes she has the only full collection available in New York City.
She first learned about prints at the end of last year in Tiktok, where people after photos and videos of the topics in cars. Since then, it has spent large amounts of time -and a good portion of money -collecting holdings.
In December there was a car in Great Central only for the holiday market. Harrison waited in line for more than an hour and a half to get the prints.
“There was a line to enter the line,” she recalled. “We were packed like sardines.”
Grand Central Just let people buy five prints at one time, so she passed through the line twice to collect them all.
She was especially excited by the prints she received in the Newy York botanical gardens, which were exclusive to the scene and presented Orchis of the same color as those in the appearance of orchids.
“I practically lost my mind [them]. “
Shortly before the commemoration day, Cafe Mornings, a family -run cafe and market in the small Catskills of Arkville, became the first place in height that a car had. Café owner Christina Kim said she had collectors who were running from city hours to get prints.
“Even our local customers make a special stop to see us and get a press,” she told the post.
Allison Ortiz, 35, an executive assistant, who lives in Hell’s Kitchen, Hasi in her first car at Home Opener for the York Liberty on May 17.
“I was fixed right away,” she said.
It took her three matches and three to four attractions every time to gather all Liberty -themed prints, which include Nuska’s doodles and team logo. It was worth it.
“I’ve been a fan of freedom since I was a little girl, so I was looking to commemorate our story making the championship win in as many ways as possible, and it was just a lot of fun and cute to pass,” she said.
Prints and sales machines are the work of Anastasia Inciardi, 28, a Brooklyn artist who now lives in Portland, Maine.
She initially invented the Inciardi Mini Printing Machine in 2023 with the aim of collecting laundry neighborhoods.
“My wife is a farmer, so her dress is always covered with dirt, and I’m covered with paint all the time, so we make a laundry probably more than the average couple,” she said. “I thought it was a fun way to sell my works of art and also to collect coins.”
Once you have installed one on her local market of farmers and having her videos go viral on social media, come to start looking for yourself.
Inciardi already has a partnership to make prints on the events thrown out of the infection, and she is working in collaboration with the wealth of a famous artist, the details of which she can still not reveal.
A recent account reached $ 1.50, but she wants to keep it a single dollar.
“This is its innovation. You can’t get anything for a dollar, even in the dollar store, but you can get this small piece of art works for a dollar,” she said. “That’s what makes it special.”
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Image Source : nypost.com