The Collection
This is the first ordinals collection post halving, showcasing unique digital artifacts anchored in the Bitcoin blockchain. Our mission is to offer collectors and enthusiasts access to exclusive ordinal inscriptions that celebrate key moments in the evolution of Bitcoin, including the pivotal halving events.
This collection is very particular as it is very unique. Its uniqueness comes from the history of Bitcoin and how it was built. Satoshi Nakamoto created rules that made every event memorable and remarkable. In a few decades when the production of blocks is going to end, everybody who gets an ordinal from this collection is going to hold a piece of History.
This collection was thought with the circumstances surrounding it: it is constituted of halves, every halve is linked to another halve allowing somebody to have a complete piece only when they have both pieces of the pair. This property was created to make a bridge between pre halving and post halving mints and adds a uniqueness to the collection.
The design of the collection is quite refined in order to make of it timeless pieces that can be exchanged by anyone. The pieces were meant as collection pieces that you can showcase to anyone.
The History
Halving is a concept primarily associated with cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin. It refers to the periodic reduction in the reward that miners receive for adding new blocks to the blockchain.
This reduction happens every 210,000 blocks, which roughly translates to every four years. The purpose of halving is to control the supply of new coins, thus influencing inflation and increasing scarcity as the total supply approaches the maximum limit, which for Bitcoin is 21 million coins.
As of the latest data, the most recent Bitcoin halving occurred on May 11, 2020. This was the third halving event in the history of Bitcoin, reducing the reward from 12.5 to 6.25 bitcoins per block. The next halving is anticipated around the 19th of May 2024, at which point the block reward will decrease to 3.125 bitcoins. This systematic reduction continues to play a critical role in the economic model of Bitcoin, influencing both the mining community and the market at large.
The exact date of the halving cannot be predicted as one can only evaluate the average time it takes to mint a block.
After the 2024 halving, there will continue to be halvings approximately every four years until about the year 2140, when the last Bitcoin is expected to be mined.