Bitcoin is more than a protocol. It is a movement, a culture, and for many of us, a way of life. Since Satoshi published the whitepaper in 2008, an entire universe of physical artifacts has emerged around Bitcoin — figurines, paintings, chess sets, commemorative coins, and functional hardware that doubles as art. These are not idle trinkets. They are physical manifestations of a cypherpunk revolution, and collecting them is one of the most tangible ways to celebrate the technology that is reshaping the world.
At D-Central Technologies, we have been building, hacking, and shipping Bitcoin mining hardware since 2016. Along the way, we started designing and 3D-printing our own line of Bitcoin collectibles right here in Canada. Every piece we produce reflects the same ethos that drives our mining operation: decentralization, sovereignty, and a relentless passion for the technology itself.
This guide covers every major category of crypto collectibles, highlights the best pieces in our own lineup, and gives you practical advice on how to start and display your bitcoin figurine collection — whether you are working with a five-dollar budget or building a dedicated showcase.
Why Bitcoin Collectibles Matter
Physical collectibles serve three purposes in Bitcoin culture. First, they commemorate milestones — block finds, halvings, pizza day, protocol upgrades. A figurine on your desk is a permanent timestamp of a moment in Bitcoin history. Second, they signal community membership. A Bitcoin bull on your shelf tells every visitor that you are part of something bigger. Third, they bridge the digital and physical. Bitcoin exists as math and electricity. Holding a 3D-printed sculpture of a Honeybadger miner in your hand makes the abstract concrete.
For those of us who believe Bitcoin is primarily a technology — not an investment vehicle — collectibles are also a way to celebrate the engineering, the cryptography, and the decentralized architecture that make this system remarkable. They are artifacts of a technological revolution, not speculation trophies.
Categories of Bitcoin Collectibles
1. Physical Figurines and Statues
Figurines are the backbone of any bitcoin collectible shelf. These range from small desk-sized pieces to larger statement statues. The best ones capture specific Bitcoin cultural references — the Honeybadger (Bitcoin’s spirit animal), charging bulls (hash rate only goes up), and iconic community figures.
At D-Central, we 3D-print all our figurines in-house in Canada using premium PLA filament. This means each piece has the tactile quality of handcrafted work combined with the precision of digital fabrication. Our figurines typically stand 4-6 inches tall and are designed to sit on desks, shelves, and mining rig setups.
2. 3D Filament Art and Paintings
This is a category that barely existed five years ago and is now exploding. 3D filament paintings use layered PLA plastic to create wall-mountable artwork with genuine depth and texture. Unlike flat prints or canvas reproductions, these pieces have a sculptural quality — you can see and feel the layers. They come framed and ready to hang.
The subject matter ranges from Bitcoin-specific iconography (bulls, moons, block commemorations) to pop-culture mashups that weave Bitcoin themes into familiar settings. We produce over a dozen unique 3D painting designs, each printed in vivid multi-color PLA.
3. Functional Hardware as Display Pieces
Here is where mining hackers have a unique advantage: actual mining hardware makes extraordinary display pieces. A Bitaxe solo miner sitting on your desk is simultaneously a functional SHA-256 hashing device and one of the most visually striking pieces of open-source hardware ever designed. The exposed PCB, the heatsink fins, the blinking LEDs — it is industrial art.
The same applies to NerdMiners, NerdAxes, and other open-source devices in our collectibles lineup. These pieces mine actual Bitcoin (lottery-style solo mining) while looking incredible on a shelf. If you want a collectible that does something, mining hardware is the category.
4. Commemorative Coins and Tokens
Physical Bitcoin coins have been part of the ecosystem since the early Casascius coins minted by Mike Caldwell starting in 2011. These brass, silver, and gold-plated coins contained actual Bitcoin loaded onto embedded private keys under a tamper-evident hologram. Original Casascius coins with unredeemed balances are now among the most valuable Bitcoin collectibles in existence, trading for significant premiums above their BTC face value.
Modern commemorative coins are typically non-loaded — purely decorative pieces that mark halvings, price milestones, or community events. They remain popular entry-level collectibles due to their low cost and universal recognizability.
5. Board Games and Toys
Bitcoin-themed games bring the culture to the table — literally. From chess sets that pit bulls against bears to building block kits that let you construct Bitcoin-branded structures, these pieces combine play with display. They make excellent gifts for Bitcoiners who have families, or for anyone who wants their collectible shelf to include some interactive elements.
D-Central’s Bitcoin Figurine Collection
We design and 3D-print every figurine in our Canadian facility. Here is the current lineup:
The Honeybadger Series
The Honeybadger is Bitcoin’s unofficial mascot — a creature that famously does not care what anyone thinks. We have built an entire series around it, each variant placing the Honeybadger in a different Bitcoin-culture scenario:
- Miner Honeybadger ($14.99) — The Honeybadger as a Bitcoin miner. Pickaxe, hard hat, pure hash rate energy. This is the flagship of the series.
- Astronaut Honeybadger ($14.99) — Suited up and headed to the moon. The “to the moon” meme rendered in physical form.
- Samurai Honeybadger ($14.99) — Bushido meets Bitcoin. A nod to the discipline and strategy required for long-term holding.
- Guy Fawkes Honeybadger ($14.99) — The cypherpunk variant. Anonymous, rebellious, sovereign. This one belongs on every privacy advocate’s desk.
- Lightning Network Honeybadger ($14.99) — Channeling the speed and efficiency of Layer 2. A tribute to the Lightning Network.
- Santa Honeybadger ($14.99) — Seasonal edition. Perfect for the Bitcoiner who wants their holiday decor on-brand.
- Snowman Honeybadger ($14.99) — Canadian winter meets Bitcoin culture. We are the North, after all.
Statement Figurines
- Bitcoin Bull Figurine ($15.99) — A charging bull emblazoned with the Bitcoin logo. The classic symbol of market momentum and hash rate growth, rendered as a desk-sized sculpture.
- The Bitcoin Shadow Priest ($16.99) — A 6-inch crypto sorcerer statue. Dark, mysterious, and perfect for anyone who appreciates the arcane nature of cryptographic systems.
- Bitcoin Duck ($14.99) — A HODL-themed duck figurine. Lighthearted, fun, and an instant conversation starter.
- Articulated Bitcoin Buddy ($14.99) — A poseable crypto companion with articulated joints. You can position this one differently every day.
- Bitcoin Roller Coaster Figurine ($14.99) — The legendary meme brought to life. Captures the wild volatility narrative that every Bitcoiner has lived through.
- Bitcoin Desk Logo ($14.99) — A freestanding gold-and-black Bitcoin symbol. Clean, minimal, professional. Works in a home office or a trading desk.
D-Central’s 3D Painting Collection
Our 3D filament paintings are wall-mountable, framed, and printed in vivid multi-color PLA. Each one has genuine physical depth — these are not flat prints. Here are the standouts:
- The Bitcoin Bull ($20) — A charging bull in full gallop. Bold, dynamic, the centerpiece painting for any Bitcoin-themed room.
- Bitcoin Uprising ($20) — A dramatic rendering of the decentralization movement. Revolutionary energy captured in layered filament.
- Canadian Bitcoin Truckers of Liberty ($20) — A piece of Canadian history. Commemorates the intersection of freedom movements and Bitcoin adoption in Canada.
- Bitcoin Skeleton ($20) — Dark, edgy, and unmistakably cypherpunk. A skull-themed Bitcoin piece with serious presence.
- Bitaxe Block 853742 ($14.99) — Commemorates a historic Bitaxe solo mining block find. This is mining history you can hang on your wall.
- Bitcoin Pizza Painting ($14.99) — Celebrates Bitcoin Pizza Day (May 22, 2010), when 10,000 BTC was spent on two pizzas. The most expensive meal in history, immortalized in PLA.
- Bitcoin Alice ($14.99) — Alice in Wonderland meets the blockchain. Whimsical, colorful, and utterly unique.
- The Bitcoin Matriarch ($14.99) — A captivating portrait that brings elegance to Bitcoin art. Sophisticated and eye-catching.
- Sons of Bitcoin ($14.99) — Edgy crypto art inspired by biker culture. Gritty purple, red, and black tones.
- Rick and Bitcoin ($14.99) — The multiverse’s smartest scientist discovers Bitcoin. Pop culture meets protocol.
- Rick’s Bitcoin Awakening ($14.99) — A post-apocalyptic variant in red, orange, and black. Darker, grittier, and intensely atmospheric.
- The Bitcoin Moon ($14.99) — Simple, iconic, aspirational. The moon with a Bitcoin twist.
- Bitcoin Charging Bull Painting ($14.99) — The wall-art companion to our bull figurine. Layered PLA gives this charging bull genuine sculptural depth.
- Crypto Lambo ($20) — The car. The meme. The dream — except for us, the real dream is decentralization. Still looks incredible on a wall.
The Bitcoin Chess Set and Games
The Bitcoin Chess Set ($29.99) is one of the most creative Bitcoin collectibles we have seen — and yes, we are biased because we make it. This is a complete miniature chess set where bulls face off against bears. The pieces are loaded with Bitcoin references:
- Queen: The Lightning Network — the most powerful piece on the board represents the most powerful scaling solution in the ecosystem
- Bishops: Satoshi — moving diagonally, always influential, never seen
- Rooks: Miners — the towers that secure the network’s foundation
- Knights: Bitcoin’s unpredictable warriors
- Pawns: The rank-and-file hodlers, moving forward one block at a time
This is a functional game and a display piece in one. It pairs exceptionally well with the Bitcoin Building Blocks ($14.99) — a set of 10 crypto-themed brick toys compatible with major building block brands. Stack them, build with them, or just display the individual Bitcoin blocks.
Signs, Decor, and Functional Collectibles
Beyond figurines and art, we produce a range of functional Bitcoin decor that straddles the line between collectible and daily-use item:
- Bitcoin LED Sign ($69.99) — An illuminated 3D-printed Bitcoin logo powered by a 5M LED strip. This is the statement piece for a mining room or office. The orange glow is unmistakable.
- Bitcoin Runic Wall Clock ($29.99) — An Aztec-inspired design with silent quartz movement. Functional timekeeping with Bitcoin aesthetics.
- Bitcoin HODL Sign ($14.99) — Desktop or wall-mountable. Four letters that define a philosophy.
- Bitcoin Logo Wall Plaque (Orange) ($14.99) — A clean 3D Bitcoin symbol in orange. Iconic.
- Bitcoin Logo Wall Plaque (White) ($14.99) — The same design in clean white. Pairs well with lighter setups.
- Bitcoin Coaster Set with Holder ($10) — Protect your desk while representing the protocol. 3D-printed with a matching holder.
- HODL The Door Stopper ($12.99) — A Bitcoin-themed door holder. Functional, funny, and HODL-themed. The name alone makes it worth having.
Special Mentions: Flagship Collectibles
Dorian Nakamoto Statue
The Dorian Nakamoto Statue ($30) is a tribute to one of Bitcoin’s most famous moments of mistaken identity. When Newsweek “unmasked” Dorian Nakamoto as Bitcoin’s creator in 2014, the community rallied around the bewildered man, raised funds for him, and turned him into an accidental icon. This statue captures that moment in Bitcoin history. At $30, it is one of our premium figurines and a genuine conversation piece.
Michael Saylor Bull
The Michael Holder on Bull Figurine ($14.99) features articulated heads on a Bitcoin maximalist riding a charging bull. Whether you admire the institutional adoption strategy or just appreciate the meme potential, this piece captures a defining character of the current Bitcoin era. 3D-printed in Canada with articulated joints for customizable posing.
Bitcoin Roller Coaster
The Bitcoin Roller Coaster Figurine ($14.99) immortalizes one of Bitcoin’s most enduring memes. The roller coaster guy — arms raised, screaming into the volatility — is recognizable to anyone who has watched a Bitcoin price chart for more than fifteen minutes. This 3D-printed piece captures that energy perfectly and is one of our best sellers.
Display Ideas: How to Showcase Your Collection
A collection is only as good as its display. Here are proven approaches for showcasing your bitcoin collectibles:
The Mining Desk Setup
Position figurines alongside your actual mining hardware. A Bitaxe solo miner flanked by a Miner Honeybadger and a Bitcoin Buddy creates a cohesive “mining station” aesthetic. Add a Bitcoin Desk Logo as a centerpiece and a HODL sign behind the monitor. The hardware provides ambient noise and blinking LEDs; the figurines provide character.
The Gallery Wall
Mount 3D paintings in a grid or salon-style arrangement. Start with a Bitcoin Bull or Bitcoin Uprising as the anchor piece, then surround it with smaller paintings like Bitcoin Alice, The Bitcoin Moon, and the Bitaxe Block 853742 commemoration. Mix in a Bitcoin Logo Wall Plaque or two for structural variety. Aim for 5-7 pieces on a single wall for maximum impact.
The Shadow Box Display
Deep-frame shadow boxes from any craft store work beautifully for smaller figurines. Line the back with black felt or fabric, install a small LED strip for accent lighting, and arrange 3-5 Honeybadger figurines at different heights. The depth of the shadow box gives each piece its own stage.
The Shelf Collection
Floating shelves in a staggered arrangement create a dynamic display. Dedicate one shelf to figurines, another to the chess set (displayed mid-game), and a third to functional pieces like the wall clock and coaster set. Intersperse with actual mining hardware — a NerdMiner, a Bitaxe, a vintage ASIC chip — to blend collectibles with functional tech.
Starting Your Bitcoin Collectible Collection on a Budget
You do not need to spend hundreds to start building a meaningful collection. Here is a practical budget ladder:
Under $10: The Starter Kit
Begin with stickers. At $3 each, our sticker collection offers over 20 designs — from the Block 853742 Sticker to the Anon Bitcoin Wizard, Pulp Biction, The Bitdolorian, and Bitcoin Matrix Chain Code. Stick them on laptops, water bottles, mining rigs, and hardware wallets. Three stickers for under $10 is the easiest on-ramp into Bitcoin collecting.
$10-20: First Figurines and Art
Move into the Bitcoin Coaster Set ($10) for functional decor, or grab your first figurine from the Honeybadger series at $14.99. A single 3D painting like The Bitcoin Moon ($14.99) gives you instant wall art. At this tier, every piece is a standalone display item.
$20-50: Building the Core
This is where collections get serious. The Dorian Nakamoto Statue ($30) and Bitcoin Chess Set ($29.99) are premium pieces at accessible prices. Combine a figurine with a 3D painting — say the Bitcoin Bull Figurine ($15.99) with the Bitcoin Bull 3D Painting ($20) — for a matched set that anchors an entire shelf.
$50+: The Statement Collection
The Bitcoin LED Sign ($69.99) is the crown jewel for any display. Pair it with the Bitcoin Runic Wall Clock ($29.99) and a curated selection of figurines. At this level, consider adding a functional Bitaxe solo miner to the display — a piece that mines actual Bitcoin while looking spectacular.
Frequently Asked Questions
What materials are D-Central’s figurines made from?
All our figurines and 3D-printed collectibles are manufactured using premium PLA (polylactic acid) filament. PLA is a plant-based, biodegradable thermoplastic that produces vibrant colors and fine detail. It is durable enough for permanent display while being environmentally friendlier than petroleum-based plastics. Every piece is printed in our Canadian facility.
Are the 3D paintings framed and ready to hang?
Yes. Every 3D filament painting in our collection comes framed and ready to hang right out of the box. No additional framing or mounting hardware is needed. Simply unpack and put it on your wall.
How large are the figurines?
Most of our figurines stand between 4 and 6 inches tall, making them ideal for desk, shelf, or mining rig display. The Dorian Nakamoto Statue and Bitcoin Shadow Priest are among the larger pieces at approximately 6 inches. Exact dimensions are listed on each product page.
Can I use a Bitaxe as both a display piece and a miner?
Absolutely. That is the beauty of open-source mining hardware. A Bitaxe runs 24/7 as a solo Bitcoin miner while sitting on your desk looking like a piece of high-tech art. The exposed PCB, heatsink, and LED indicators make it visually striking. It draws minimal power and produces negligible heat and noise. Visit our Bitaxe Hub for the complete lineup.
What are Casascius coins and are they still made?
Casascius coins were physical Bitcoin coins created by Mike Caldwell from 2011 to 2013. Each coin contained a private key under a tamper-evident hologram, loaded with actual BTC. Caldwell stopped producing them in 2013 after receiving a letter from FinCEN. Unredeemed Casascius coins are now rare collectibles that trade at significant premiums. D-Central does not sell Casascius coins, but they remain an important part of Bitcoin collectible history.
Do you ship Bitcoin collectibles internationally?
Yes. We ship all collectibles worldwide from our facility in Laval, Quebec, Canada. Shipping costs and delivery times vary by destination. Canadian and US orders typically arrive fastest. All items are carefully packaged to prevent damage during transit.
What is the best first Bitcoin collectible to buy?
For under $5, start with a sticker from our sticker collection. For a first figurine, the Miner Honeybadger ($14.99) is our most popular entry point — it captures the Bitcoin mining ethos perfectly. For wall art, The Bitcoin Moon ($14.99) is a clean, iconic piece that works in any room.
Are these collectibles limited edition?
Our 3D-printed collectibles are produced in batches. While we do not currently number individual pieces, designs are periodically retired or refreshed. Certain commemorative items — like the Bitaxe Block 853742 painting — are tied to specific historical events and may not be restocked once sold out.
Build Your Collection With D-Central
Bitcoin collectibles are physical proof that this technology matters enough to build a culture around. Every figurine, painting, chess piece, and sticker is a vote for decentralization — a physical object that says this technology changed my life and I want a piece of it on my shelf.
We have been designing and manufacturing Bitcoin collectibles since we started D-Central in 2016, the same year we began hacking institutional mining hardware for home miners. Every piece we sell is 3D-printed in Canada, designed by Bitcoiners, and built with the same attention to detail we put into our mining hardware.
Browse our full Bitcoin Figurines and Collectibles category, explore the Bitcoin Wall Art and 3D Paintings collection, or start small with our sticker lineup. And if you want a collectible that actually mines Bitcoin while it sits on your desk, head to the Bitaxe Hub.
Every hash counts. Every collectible tells a story.