The NES wasn't a console. It was an altar. Grey brick, gold pins, a careful place in the living room where the family pretended not to worship it.
What you're looking at
The original NES rendered as a small altar piece — cartridge slot framed like a tabernacle, controller cords laid out symmetrically, a wall of light behind it that no console has earned since. Editorial reverence for the box that started everything for a whole generation.
Why this wall, why now
If you grew up with one, you remember the exact felt position of the power button. You remember the angle of the cartridges as you slid them in. This print is a tribute to that specific muscle memory — the grey-brick liturgy.
Specs
- Material: Enhanced Matte Paper, 189 g/m² (10.3 mil)
- Finish: Giclée print, 94% opacity, 104% ISO brightness
- Paper sourced from Japan
- Crafted on demand, ships within 2–7 business days
- 16 sizes 5″×7″ to 24″×36″ plus A1/A2
- Frame not included
Who it's for
NES-era retro gamers, console collectors, gamer dads. Pair with Cartridge Shrine prints.
FAQ
Frame? No.
Shipping? Crafted on demand, ships 2–7 days.
Returns? Defects only, within 30 days.