I tried the new Farcaster Frames functionality last week, minting some NFTs and creating several NFTs of my own. Farcaster is a protocol for building decentralized social networks; there are several client apps, including Warpcast, Supercaster, and others. Posts are called “casts,” and Farcaster Frames allow you to turn a cast into an interactive app, for functionality such as creating polls, minting NFTs, browsing galleries and more.
Airdrop of Can You Love Cover
Using Manifold’s Frame Mint on Base app, I created a Frame URL to cast by first creating a plain image NFT, called “Airdrop of Can You Love Cover“ to mint from within a Frame, which used a “Recast and click 👉 Mint” workflow, with minting live for 24 hours:
The NFT used token standard ERC-1155 and minted 279 items. I deleted the frame cast itself, ultimately; but “Airdrop of Can You Love Cover” NFT is viewable on OpenSea here. And as promised in the frame cast, minters of this NFT were also then (manually) airdropped my NFT “Can You Love” Cover:
Mike Shupp Gallery Card
For another Farcaster Frame, I again used Manifold’s app, this time with their newly added “Like and click 👉 Mint” workflow, and created ERC-1155 token “Mike Shupp Gallery Card,” an NFT "card" for my Gallery.so displays, to mint from within the frame cast:
This frame cast is viewable here, and Mike Shupp Gallery Card NFT is viewable on OpenSea here.
September Sunset in Northern Virginia
To help beta test platform DropFrame, I made the photograph NFT “September Sunset in Northern Virginia,“ an ERC-721 token with a workflow to mint an edition of ~25 (or until gas would run out):
This frame cast is viewable here, and September Sunset in Northern Virginia NFT (which ultimately minted 72 items) is viewable on OpenSea here.
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