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New York Post
11 hours ago
- Entertainment
- New York Post
New Yorkers are obsessed with collecting these tiny treasures across the city: ‘I practically lost my mind
Forget rooftop pools and drinking Frosé. The 'it' summer activity in the city is collecting miniature art prints from old-fashioned coin-operated machines. 'It's so fun,' said Kiana Ting, 25, who works in data analytics in the beauty industry and lives in Manhattan. 12 Kiana Ting loves collecting Inciardi prints from vending machines around NYC. Emmy Park 12 Ting has a growing collection of the prints. Some of her favorites are food-themed. Emmy Park There are a growing number of venues to collect the 2.5-by-3.5 inch color images, known as Inciardi prints. The first machine dispensing them was installed at the Whitney Museum of Art at the end of 2023. Now there are 65 across the country, including 11 in New York City — in locations ranging from Warby Parker in SoHo to Brooklyn Brewery in Williamsburg to a new one at Barclays Center, where fans have waited over an hour for prints at recent Liberty games — and one in the Catskills. Machines are coming soon to Rosemary's, an Italian restaurant in the West Village, and Athena Keke's, a new women's sports bar opening in Clinton Hill Fans insert four quarters into a machine to receive one one of eight prints at random. Venue owners get to choose which prints their machine offers from a library of 150, while some spots offer exclusive custom prints. 12 The first mini print vending machine was installed at the Whitney in late 2023. Courtesy of Laura Harrison Ting recently tried to visit all six of the print machines in Brooklyn in one day. 'Foster Sundry in Bushwick has a machine with food-themed prints, and I love the pickle, sardine, and blue cheese prints I got there,' she said. Laura Harrison, 60, a freelance children's book reviewer who lives in White Plains, is obsessed with collecting the prints. 'I have maybe 500,' she told The Post. 'Once you get into [them], you want to get as many as you can.' She believes she has the only full collection available in New York City. 12 The are 11 venues with the machines in the city — and more on the way. Merrill Sherman / NY Post Design She first learned about the prints at the end of last year on TikTok, where people post photos and videos of themselves at the machines. Since then, she has spent vast amounts of time —and a decent chunk of money — collecting the keepsakes. In December there was a machine in Grand Central just for the holiday market. Harrison waited in line for over an hour and half to get the prints. 'There was a line to get into the line,' she recalled. 'We were packed in like sardines.' Grand Central only let people buy five prints at a time, so she went through the line two more times to collect them all. 12 Laura Harrison, pictured at Books are Magic, says she's collected all the prints in the city. Courtesy of Laura Harrison 12 Here are the prints on offer at Books are Magic. Courtesy of Laura Harrison She was particularly thrilled by the prints she got at the NewYork Botanical Gardens, which were exclusive to the venue and featured orchis the exact same color as those in the orchid show. 'I practically lost my mind over [them].' Just before Memorial Day, Cafe Mornings, a family-run Korean cafe and market in the tiny Catskills town of Arkville, became the first venue upstate to have a machine. The cafe's owner, Christina Kim, said she's had collectors driving hours from the city to get the prints. 'Even our local customers made a special stop to see us and get a print,' she told The Post. 12 Harrison said she 'practically lost my mind' over the special prints at New York Botanical Garden for the orchid show. Courtesy of Laura Harrison Allison Ortiz, 35, an executive assistant, who lives in Hell's Kitchen, encountered her first machine at the home opener for the York Liberty on May 17. 'I was instantly hooked,' she said. It took her three games — and three to four pulls each time — to collect all of the Liberty-themed prints, which include doodles of the mascot and the team logo. It was worth it. 12 To get a print, you must insert four quarters into the machines. Emmy Park 'I've been a Liberty fan since I was a little girl, so I was looking to commemorate our history making championship win in as many ways as possible, and this was just too fun and cute to pass up,' she said. The prints and vending machines are the work of Anastasia Inciardi, 28, an artist from Brooklyn who now lives in Portland, Maine. She originally invented the Inciardi Mini Print Vending Machine in 2023 with the goal of collecting quarters for laundry. 12 Harrison got a rare golden ticket and a balloon dog at Haricot Vert in Brooklyn. Courtesy of Laura Harrison 12 Harrison waited in a long line to get a print at Grand Central, which had a vending machine during its holiday market. Courtesy of Laura Harrison 12 One of the Grand Central prints on offer portrayed the station's beautiful constellation ceiling. Courtesy of Laura Harrison 'My wife is a farmer, so her clothing is always covered in dirt, and I am covered in ink all the time, so we do laundry probably more than the average couple,' she said. 'I thought it was a fun way to sell my artwork and also collect coins.' After installing one at her local farmers market and having videos of it go viral on social media, venues started asking for their own. Inciardi already has a partnership to do prints for events thrown by the Infatuation, and she's working on a collaboration with the estate of a famous artist, the details of which she can't yet reveal. 12 Anastasia Inciardi is the artist behind the prints and their vending machines. Anastasia Inciardi / Instagram An accountant recently suggested that she up the price to $1.50, but she wants to keep it a single dollar. 'That's the novelty of it. You can't get anything for a dollar, even at the dollar store, but you can get this little piece of artwork for a dollar,' she said. 'That's what makes it special.'


Winnipeg Free Press
26-04-2025
- Entertainment
- Winnipeg Free Press
Long live independent bookstores
Opinion In the 1998 rom-com You've Got Mail, Kathleen Kelly (Meg Ryan) owns an adorable independent bookstore facing an existential threat — a big baddie corporate chain bookstore that has moved in across the street. Problem is, Kathleen falls in love with Joe Fox, the big baddie corporate chain bookstore's owner (Tom Hanks), only she doesn't know he's the big baddie corporate chain bookstore's owner at first because they have struck up an anonymous relationship over AOL (I love how '90s this movie is). I don't know how You've Got Mail would be adapted for 2025 — we're too online and know too much about each other for the identity caper piece of it, and Amazon has already plunged the dagger into the heart of brick-and-mortar retail — but I do know the ending would be the same: the independent bookstore would close. (The big baddie corporate chain bookstore would probably close, too, or it would start selling candles and 'reading socks.') Today is Canadian Independent Bookstore Day, an annual day when readers, writers, illustrators, publishers and book lovers celebrate these pillars of the community — the same people independent booksellers support every day. I love indie bookstores. As with art galleries, I make a point of visiting them when I travel. Books are Magic in Brooklyn, Magers & Quinn in Minneapolis, Parnassus Books in Nashville — these are all places I've spent time in and have supported. Parnassus and Books are Magic were both opened by novelists — Ann Patchett and Emma Straub, respectively — and it's still my (now deferred) dream to one day make it to Judy Blume's Books & Books in Key West, Fla. Indie bookstores are third places. They build community. They form the cultural DNA of a place. Imagine Winnipeg without McNally Robinson; I've been buying books there since I could read, and I still harbour the dream of one day having my portrait among the local authors (just gotta write that book first). They support authors in all stages of their careers. They are places where we can access knowledge, ideas and stories. Indie bookstores — and their siblings, libraries — are especially vital in an age when book bans are on the rise. That might seem like an American concern, but we all know how sentiments can creep northward. In 2022, the Durham District School Board in Ontario banned The Great Bear, a book by Winnipeg-based Swampy Cree author and graphic novelist David A. Robertson. Indies can sell whatever they want, allowing critical physical access to books that may have been pulled from shelves elsewhere. But indie bookstores also have an important role to play as a counterbalance to e-commerce sites such as Amazon, which have been flooded with AI-generated slop. A lot of these scam books rip off legitimate authors which, as many affected writers have pointed out, not only has the potential to harm their sales, but their reputations — especially as technology gets better and the fakes get harder to detect. Besides, ordering a book is just not the same. Browsing the shelves — at your indie, your used bookstore or your local library — reading the blurbs, asking for recommendations, attending readings and signings, all of these things make you feel cosy, like you're part of something: an experience, a community. In our increasingly online lives, indie bookstores make you feel like you're in the world. Jen ZorattiColumnist Jen Zoratti is a columnist and feature writer working in the Arts & Life department, as well as the author of the weekly newsletter NEXT. A National Newspaper Award finalist for arts and entertainment writing, Jen is a graduate of the Creative Communications program at RRC Polytech and was a music writer before joining the Free Press in 2013. Read more about Jen. Every piece of reporting Jen produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print – part of the Free Press's tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press's history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates. Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber. Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.