Exploring the Growing Trend of Digital Collectables
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Digital collectables have helped open up blockchain technology to many new avenues outside of conventional financial applications, providing media attention with an influx of funding that has helped NFTs become more widely adopted.
This article is in collaboration with the online event ‘‘The Future of… Arts: Digital 360, NFTs, Metaverse, IP, AI. Live on Dinis Guarda YouTube Channel on December 8 from 1 pm to 3 pm GMT.
Art is collected for many reasons, creativity, originality, expression, fame and prestige. The range of things that people collect is much broader than art, as wide a category as this is.
Collectables form a class of specific and identifiable objects, which most can recognise as having a purpose and value as something that someone may collect.
Digital collectables have helped open up blockchain technology to many new avenues outside of conventional financial applications, providing media attention with an influx of funding that has helped NFTs become more widely adopted.
Collectables has helped bridge the gap between using blockchain technology to mint cryptocurrency and NFTs as tokens of virtual assets. These tokens are proof that users can own a product. In representing both physical and digital assets, NFTs are a vital part of the blockchain ecosystem and the broader economy. Collectables have been a critical step towards a wider acceptance of digital assets.
The use cases are vast, and many developers will likely develop new and exciting innovations for this promising technology.
The PATCH token for example is a core Pattern Chain token that is also deeply integrated into the entire ecosystem. PATCH allows you to have access to exclusive educational content, receive exclusive benefits from the biggest exchange in Latin America C-Patex.
The rise of NFTs
The NFT is a new field of interest and opportunity for collectors. Marketplaces give them direct access to a broader selection of creative work, and NFTs provide them with surety of ownership and exclusive control over asset use and bespoke content.
NFTs have inverted the traditional model of the art market. While it is true that NFTs have created digital scarcity, that is not their main selling point for collectors. Unlike physical art, where value correlates with scarcity, digital art’s value correlates with its ubiquity. In the words of Stephen Humphries, NFTs have transformed the art market by:
“Attaching value to artworks that are ubiquitous rather than scarce … NFTs have rapidly expanded the demand for digital art forms that haven’t always been valued as much as physical paintings, sculptures, and installations.”
What is a Collectable?
A collectable is any object regarded as of value or interest to a collector. Common collectables include antiques, toys, coins, comic books, and stamps.
Collectable items are not necessarily financially valuable or indeed uncommon. A collectable item may or may not be worth far more than its original purchase price (if any). There may or may not be many specific items in existence. The critical point is that someone finds them worthwhile.
Some collectables arise from a fashion or fad. Some have been explicitly manufactured as goods for people to collect, such as collectors’ cards, special edition toys and plushes. Others are naturally scarcer, more unique, and more enduring interest, such as antiques.
Antiques are an exciting category as they illustrate some of the differences. Not all antiques are rare, and nor are they all considered collectable.
People who amass collectables take much time and care to put together a collection, usually going to some lengths to acquire, preserve and display them.
In some cases, collectables are more valuable as a set rather than disaggregated.
Collectable items, and collections, often develop value over time; as the items become scarcer, they gain rarity and potentially nostalgic value.
Rare collectables are usually sold for a premium, especially if they are in mint condition. The condition of a collectable has a significant impact on its market value. Having a collectable in pristine condition means the price can go up. Yet if an item has deteriorated over time, there's probably a good chance it will not be worth much—if anything at all.
Manufactured collectables are often more tokens of marketing hype and consumer dynamics than the actual value, and many items made for the purpose fail to retain any appeal or value.
The Beanie Baby fad of the 1990s is an excellent example of a mass-produced item marketed as a collectable. Ty Warner, the product's manufacturer, produced hundreds of small plush toys with a floppy, bean bag-like feel. Consumers went crazy over them, believing they would become valuable one day. However, most were so widely owned that they never acquired any resale value, apart from limited editions that were hard to find as they were snapped up by resellers as soon as they were released.