Trading Card Sized Art Prints
Museum-quality prints of original paintings, sealed in a collector's acrylic case. Only 50 of each.
Shop the CollectionWhy Collect
Every Minicuration print reproduces a hand-painted original — acrylic, latex, resin, or mixed media on canvas or wood panel. The source painting exists. The edition is capped at 50. When edition 50 sells, the design is closed permanently.
The card back carries the artist's statement — the medium, the constraint, and the idea behind the work in the artist's own words. It's the difference between owning an image and owning a piece of a practice.
The 2.5 × 3.5-inch ACEO standard means every print fits standard card sleeves, binders, and toploaders. Display it in the included acrylic case or store flat with hundreds of others. The format was built to last.
"I wanted to be closer to my craft. I painted straight from the tubes, faster than the influence of intention,and gave myself the time of Paganini's Caprice No.24."
"Navigating emotions is to know the water from the winds."
About Minicuration
Minicuration turns original paintings into trading card-sized limited edition prints — bringing real art into the physical world at a price that makes collecting possible. Each card is numbered, artist-credited, and magnetically sealed in an acrylic case with a display stand included.
Every design is strictly limited to 50 numbered prints. Once an edition sells out, it's gone. The back of each card tells the full story: artist, medium, edition number, and the concept behind the work in the artist's own words.
The format is ACEO (Art Cards, Editions and Originals) — a 2.5 × 3.5-inch standard used by fine art collectors since the mid-2000s. The size matches a standard trading card exactly, which means every print slots into a card sleeve, binder, or toploader without specialist framing or handling.
From the Journal
Format & History
The format's origin is stranger than most collectors expect.
Process
Not every painting earns its reduction. These six do.
Collecting Guide
The rules of serious collecting applied to a format that fits in a binder.