NFT Drops

Past Drops

A selection of the drops so far

The Invisible Oceans Founder's Collection is being dropped over several weeks. The drops are grouped narratively and through the drops we are telling stories. These stories are the foundation of all the projects that came after - the films, documentaries, brand films and commercials, the permanent installations and location based VR and AR experiences. This collection and these stories will also lay the foundation to our future projects - both NFT and real life.

1. Water Babies

Photography by: Peter and Chris Parks

Most of the creatures that inhabit the oceans start off their lives as plankton. Crabs start off made of glass with defensive spikes longer than their bodies. Lobsters spend the first year of their life hitchhiking round the oceans on the backs of jellyfish. Even octopuses and cuttlefish start as microscopic toy-like versions of themselves.

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1. Water Babies

Photography by: Peter and Chris Parks

Most of the creatures that inhabit the oceans start off their lives as plankton. Crabs start off made of glass with defensive spikes longer than their bodies. Lobsters spend the first year of their life hitchhiking round the oceans on the backs of jellyfish. Even octopuses and cuttlefish start as microscopic toy-like versions of themselves.

Learn more

2. The Blues Brothers

Photography by: Peter and Chris Parks

Rarely seen and even less understood is an enigmatic community of creatures the live on, under or within the surface of the ocean. They are completely at the mercy of the currents and winds and most people's interactions with these animals happens when they get washed up on a beach. As well as coming across an unidentified species within this community, Peter and Chris have spent countless hours gazing at the surface of the sea in the hope of a new sighting.

Learn more

2. The Blues Brothers

Photography by: Peter and Chris Parks

Rarely seen and even less understood is an enigmatic community of creatures the live on, under or within the surface of the ocean. They are completely at the mercy of the currents and winds and most people's interactions with these animals happens when they get washed up on a beach. As well as coming across an unidentified species within this community, Peter and Chris have spent countless hours gazing at the surface of the sea in the hope of a new sighting.

Learn more

Shards of Glass

Photography by: Peter and Chris Parks

Some of the smallest organisms in the Invisible Oceans Founder's Collection are neither plant not animal. In fact Diatoms, while sharing characteristics of both are still an enigma to science.

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Shards of Glass

Photography by: Peter and Chris Parks

Some of the smallest organisms in the Invisible Oceans Founder's Collection are neither plant not animal. In fact Diatoms, while sharing characteristics of both are still an enigma to science.

Learn more

4. Alien Too

Photography by: Peter and Chris Parks

Plankton have often been used as the inspiration for science fiction and none more so than the amphipods and copepods. It was a species of amphipod, Phronima, that inspired some of H.R.Geiger's work and in turn the designs for the Alien Queen in Aliens.

Learn more

4. Alien Too

Photography by: Peter and Chris Parks

Plankton have often been used as the inspiration for science fiction and none more so than the amphipods and copepods. It was a species of amphipod, Phronima, that inspired some of H.R.Geiger's work and in turn the designs for the Alien Queen in Aliens.

Learn more

5. The Grass of the Sea

Photography by: Peter and Chris Parks

In the same way as grass forms the base of the food web in the Serengeti, the plant plankton form the base of the food web in the sea. Without them to turn sunlight into food through photosynthesis, none of the larger life forms would be able to survive. They are also responsible for creating 50-70% of the oxygen that we breathe.

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5. The Grass of the Sea

Photography by: Peter and Chris Parks

In the same way as grass forms the base of the food web in the Serengeti, the plant plankton form the base of the food web in the sea. Without them to turn sunlight into food through photosynthesis, none of the larger life forms would be able to survive. They are also responsible for creating 50-70% of the oxygen that we breathe.

Learn more

6. The Abyss

Photography by: Peter and Chris Parks

The ctenophores are arguably the most enigmatic creatures in the ocean. They have been around since the time of the dinosaurs and appear to move without effort. The beroe is little more than a stomach with a pair of lips and can eat animals bigger than them in one gulp!

Learn more

6. The Abyss

Photography by: Peter and Chris Parks

The ctenophores are arguably the most enigmatic creatures in the ocean. They have been around since the time of the dinosaurs and appear to move without effort. The beroe is little more than a stomach with a pair of lips and can eat animals bigger than them in one gulp!

Learn more

We are building a community around the Invisible Oceans Founder's Collection

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