An on-chain experiment
full refund if it fails
you keep the art
One person asking the internet to help them buy a Chromie Squiggle. No promises, no roadmap, no team — just a contract, a deadline, and a commitment.
Chromie Squiggles are Erick “Snowfro” Calderon’s seminal generative art collection on Art Blocks — the project that, in many ways, launched on-chain generative art as a movement. Owning one has always felt out of reach for most. This is one attempt to change that, for one person, with help from strangers.
Every patron receives a unique on-chain BMAS NFT. The more ETH you contribute, the more slices appear — from a single curve up to the full 15. Each point costs slightly more than the last — a bonding curve baked into the contract. Earlier patrons pay less. If the goal is reached, minting closes and the creator withdraws to a public wallet to buy the Squiggle — the transaction is the proof. If the goal isn't reached by the deadline, every patron can claim a full refund. The contract is immutable. No one can change the rules. The code is law — and trust is earned with every transaction.
Patrons send ETH and receive a unique on-chain BMAS NFT. Each token has an immutable seed that determines its output — more slices reveals more of it.
ETH is held in the contract until the goal is met. If the goal is reached, the creator withdraws to a public wallet and commits to buying a Chromie Squiggle. Every step is visible on-chain.
If a Squiggle is bought, the on-chain transaction proves it. If the goal isn't met by the deadline, every patron can pull a full refund. The art stays in your wallet either way.