November 21, 2024

Sultan Gustaf Al Ghozali, a 22-year-old computer science student from Semarang, Indonesia, converted and sold nearly 1,000 selfie images as NFTs. According to Ghozali, he took photos of himself for five years — between the ages of 18 and 22 — as a way to look back on his graduation journey.

Source: Mothership.SG

Ghozali took selfies, either sitting or standing in front of his computer, which were later converted into NFTs and uploaded to OpenSea in December 2021. The artist set the price for each NFT selfie at $3 without expecting interest from serious buyers. While monetizing his expressionless images, Ghozali said:

“You can do anything like flipping or whatever but please don’t abuse my photos or my parents will very disappointed in me. I believe in you guys so please take care of my photos.”

Source: Cryptobeth

Going against his wildest expectations, Ghozali’s NFT offering blew up as prominent members of Crypto Twitter showed support by purchasing and marketing the offerings.

With the rising popularity, one of Ghozali’s NFT sold for 0.247 Ether (ETH) on Friday worth $806 at the time of purchase, according to AFP. The young entrepreneur also added a touch of personalization by providing some background information along with the selfies, which adds to the rarity of the NFT.

Some of Ghozali’s selfie NFTs sold for 0.9 ETH, worth roughly $3,000, according to a Lifestyle Asia report. Ghozali’s collection subsequently reached a total trade volume of 317 ETH, equivalent to more than $1 million. The young artist also made his first tax payment on the basis of this income through OpenSea.

Source: Blaze Trends

Despite the recent sluggish performance of the overall crypto market, the NFT marketplace and blockchain gaming industry continues to record high transaction volumes.

As Cointelegraph reported, DappRadar data shows that the number of unique active wallets connected to Ethereum NFT decentralized applications grew by 43% since Q3 2021. In addition, the money generated by NFT trading went from $10.7 billion in Q3 2021 to $11.9 billion in the first 10 days of 2022.

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