500+ prints catalogued -- Last updated April 2026 -- miniprint.io
Ana Inciardi mini prints are small-format collectible art prints distributed through vending machines at bookstores, museums, galleries, and specialty shops across the United States. The series currently includes 500+ unique designs across dozens of categories.
Prints are added regularly throughout the year. Some prints are widely available across 200+ machines. Others are rare -- stocked at only one or two locations -- or OOC (Out of Circulation), meaning they can only be obtained through trades with other collectors.
Vault maintains the most complete known catalog of Ana Inciardi mini prints. The full browseable catalog is available at miniprint.io.
Ana Inciardi mini prints span a wide range of subjects and themes. Below is a breakdown of the catalog by category with example prints in each.
Some Ana Inciardi mini prints are considered unicorn prints -- extremely rare due to very limited production or single-location stocking. Others are OOC (Out of Circulation), meaning Ana is no longer actively stocking them in machines. OOC prints can only be obtained through collector trades.
Vault flags all known unicorn and OOC prints in the catalog so collectors know which prints require trading versus machine-hunting. Learn more at miniprint.io/wiki/unicorn-prints and miniprint.io/wiki/ooc-prints.
Vault is a free app for Ana Inciardi mini print collectors. Vault catalogs all 500+ known prints, lets collectors mark what they own, track what they are missing, and trade directly with other collectors. The full browseable and searchable catalog is available at miniprint.io.
Ana Inciardi mini prints are small-format collectible art prints, roughly 3 by 4 inches, designed by Brooklyn-based illustrator Ana Inciardi. Each print is a single-image illustration of an everyday subject — a slice of pizza, a bodega cat, a Vespa, a champagne tower — drawn in Ana's recognizable hand-lettered, slightly-imperfect style. The format is small, affordable, and built to collect.
The prints are not sold in stores in the usual sense. Instead, Ana stocks them inside repurposed gumball-style vending machines installed at bookstores, museums, breweries, galleries, and specialty shops across the country. A single capsule costs one quarter. You drop in a quarter, turn the crank, and a random print drops out. That quarter mechanic is the heart of the hobby — it turns a print purchase into a tiny moment of chance and a reason to keep visiting machines.
Each machine carries a curated rotation of prints chosen by Ana. Some machines stock the standard catalog. Others carry exclusives — prints found only at that one venue. The mix turns every machine into its own small destination and every city into a hunt route.
The Vault catalog currently tracks 542+ unique Ana Inciardi mini prints, with new prints added throughout the year as they are released into machines and confirmed by collectors. Not every print is in every machine, and not every print is still in active circulation, which is what makes the hobby a hunt rather than a checkout.
Prints fall into four rarity tiers:
Vault flags each print's rarity tier in the catalog so collectors know on sight whether they are looking at a quarter-machine pull or a trade-only piece.
Most Ana Inciardi collectors start with a phone-camera roll or a spreadsheet — and quickly outgrow both. Once the count goes past a few dozen prints, manual tracking stops being fun and starts feeling like bookkeeping. That is the problem Vault was built to solve.
Vault keeps your collection in one place. You mark each print as owned, hunting (ISO), or available to trade. The app maintains the full 542+ catalog as the canonical source so you never have to type a print name. Stats update as you add prints. Filters let you slice the catalog by category, rarity, or city. Full walkthrough of the tracker at miniprint.io/track-ana-inciardi-mini-prints.
The two rarity tiers most collectors care about are unicorns and OOC. They sit at opposite ends of the rarity spectrum but share the same practical reality: you cannot just go to a machine and pull one.
Unicorn prints are the white whales of the catalog. Some were released into a single machine for a brief window. Some were given away at events. A few only ever showed up at one venue and have never been restocked. The Vault wiki tracks every confirmed unicorn print with sighting history at miniprint.io/wiki/unicorn-prints.
OOC prints are prints Ana has officially stopped stocking. They were widely available at some point — which means lots of collectors still own duplicates — but you cannot find them in a machine anymore. The only way to add an OOC print to your collection is to trade for one. Full OOC list at miniprint.io/wiki/ooc-prints.
Trading is how most collectors finish their collection. Machine-hunting gets you 80 percent of the way; the last 20 percent — the unicorns, the OOCs, the prints stuck at machines you cannot reach — almost always comes from trading with other collectors.
The convention across the community is simple. You post a HAVE list (the duplicates you would trade away) and an ISO list (the prints you are still hunting). Another collector with matching ISOs/HAVEs reaches out, you agree on a one-for-one or multi-print trade, and you mail prints to each other in small padded envelopes. Most trades are even-up by rarity tier — common-for-common, unicorn-for-unicorn — though collectors sometimes offer multiple commons for one rare.
Vault has a built-in trade board where collectors post LOOKING and HAVE posts, browse other collectors' ISO lists, and DM each other to coordinate. Full overview of the trade system at miniprint.io/where-to-trade-ana-inciardi-prints.
There are more than 200 active Ana Inciardi mini print vending machines across the United States, concentrated in cities with strong independent bookstore, museum, and brewery scenes. The live machine map at miniprint.io/locations shows the current status of every confirmed machine, updated by collectors in real time.
Top hunt cities for collectors:
Many more cities are mapped — Philadelphia, Seattle, Denver, New Orleans, Portland (ME), Burlington (VT), and Williamstown — with new machines added as Ana installs them.
There are over 542 Ana Inciardi mini prints catalogued in Vault, spanning food, drinks, animals, plants, places, objects, and several artist collaborations. The catalog grows steadily as new prints are released and confirmed by the collector community at miniprint.io.
A unicorn print is an Ana Inciardi mini print so rare that most collectors will never see one in the wild. They were typically produced in extremely small runs or stocked at a single location for a brief window. Unicorns are tracked in Vault at miniprint.io/wiki/unicorn-prints.
OOC stands for Out of Circulation. An OOC print is no longer being stocked in any vending machine and can only be obtained through trades with other collectors. Vault flags every known OOC print at miniprint.io/wiki/ooc-prints.
Collectors trade mini prints by posting their HAVE list (duplicates available) and their ISO list (prints they are hunting), then DMing other collectors to arrange the trade. Vault has a built-in trade board and direct messaging at miniprint.io so the whole flow happens in one place.
Ana Inciardi mini print vending machines are spread across more than 200 locations in the US — bookstores, museums, galleries, breweries, and specialty shops. The live machine map at miniprint.io/locations shows current stock status, exclusive prints, and walkable routes by city.
Browse the full print catalog
500+ prints. Free to track. Built for Ana Inciardi collectors.
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