When Vinnie and I connected earlier this week, I joked to him that I think Letters boasts the shortest timeframe between me finding a project and deciding we needed to profile it. Upon browsing through Vinnie's collection, there's just something about the analog style that seems to perfectly encapsulate the burgeoning world of art that toes the line between traditional and digital. The pieces would look just as comfortable in an old world gallery as they would in someone's Decentraland-based collection.
If you're knew to Letters in general, I implore you to read our previous profile with Vinnie, hot off his time at NFT.NYC. It's been a few short weeks since we last chatted (but in web3, a few weeks can feel like eons), and I wanted to catch up with Vinnie about his future projects and plans ahead of his POAP, which launches today.
In an NFT landscape still rife with faceless developers and un-doxxed artists, seeing Vinnie overflowing with emotional charisma around his art is an immensely gratifying experience. Working with Vinnie reveals what makes NFTs truly so valuable. The new technology has allowed artists to distribute their work in a way never seen before 2021 and the proliferation of web3 tech.
On the genesis of his project, Vinnie emphasizes how he wanted to "bridge the gap between a digital collection and the real world." His artistic style "spawned from drawing with markers and pencils," as he grew up steeped in a more "traditional art" background. "With Letters, it was like a full integration into the digital," he tells me, adding, "but I always wanted to keep some aspect of the physical."