2012VP113 Playing Cards, “This universe is so big, yet somehow I found you.” MPC. Limited edition of 5000, numbered custom seal, face cards have no color or points, perfect for Cardistry. Brand new, sealed with cellophane. In stocks.

67.50 $

Description

– Launched 2020
– Check out the official trailer of Corn Mint here

– Regular
1. 2012VP113 Pink, limited edition of 5000, numbered –
2. 2012VP113 Corn Mint, limited edition of 2500, (((UNNUMBERED!!!)))
3. 2012VP113 Corn Mint Upgraded (((NON GILDED EDGES!!!))), limited edition of 1199, numbered
https://carousell.com/p/1082432449
4. The Moon, limited edition of 5000, numbered
https://carousell.com/p/1087461823

– Gilded / Upgraded
5. 2012VP113 Pink, Gold Gilded Edges, limited edition of 399, numbered custom seal with Gold letters
6. 2012VP113 Pink, Pink Gilded Edges, limited edition of 399, numbered custom seal with Pink letters
https://carousell.com/p/1082431326
7. The Moon Gold Gilded Edges, limited edition of 399, numbered
https://carousell.com/p/1087462378
8. Brick Box, not for sale separately. Complimentary with purchase of 6 Regular decks (no mix and match of Gilded)
– Note that Corn Mint was never produced in a Gilded edition.

🌟 The 2012VP133 Playing Cards series with the theme of planets in the galaxy, paints us the beauty of the stars. This is the first deck in this series. The card was inspired by the discovery of pink dwarf planets by American astronomers: 2012VP113.

🌟 And the biggest feature of the design is that its face cards have no color or points, each pattern and detail are in order to improve the visual effect of cardistry. Let me say this again, there are no Courts, no Numbers, only Jokers.

🌟 Only limited to 5000 decks. Comes with gold foil and embossing on the tuck case. These cards are printed with MPC (MakePlayingCards) with their new linen air light stock & Beta finish.

🌟 From an article by Alexandra Witze on 26 March 2014:
“Dwarf planet stretches Solar System’s edge
Icy body found far beyond Pluto raises questions about cosmic history.

The Solar System just got a lot more far-flung. Astronomers have discovered a probable dwarf planet that orbits the Sun far beyond Pluto, in the most distant trajectory known.

Together with Sedna, a similar extreme object discovered a decade ago, the find is reshaping ideas about how the Solar System came to be. “It goes to show that there’s something we don’t know about our Solar System, and it’s something important,” says co-discoverer Chad Trujillo, an astronomer at Gemini Observatory in Hilo, Hawaii. “We’re starting to get a taste of what’s out beyond what we consider the edge.”

“This is a great discovery,” says Michael Brown, a planetary astronomer at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena. “We’ve been searching for more objects like Sedna for more than 10 years now.” Finding another one like it reduces the chances that Sedna is a fluke, he says. But astronomers now have to come up with ideas to explain how these objects remain tightly gravitationally bound to the Sun when they orbit so far away.

The newfound object’s official name is 2012 VP113, but the discovery team calls it VP for short, or just ‘Biden’ — after US Vice-President Joe Biden.

Additional information

Weight 0.2 kg

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