Current shipping vinyl: pressed grooves, copper-bordered label rim, full album art on the label. Reference baseline for everything below.
Five renderings of the same disc · Hover variant 04 for the sleeve reveal
← Return to playerCurrent shipping vinyl: pressed grooves, copper-bordered label rim, full album art on the label. Reference baseline for everything below.
Vinyl peeks out of a square cardstock sleeve — paper grain, ring-wear circle, worn-corner notch. The album art lives on the sleeve; the disc gets a plain typographic label. Reads instantly as "record on a turntable", not "spinning disc."
Three layers added to the existing vinyl: a fixed reflection sweep (doesn't rotate with the disc — the studio-light look), paper grain on the label so the print sits in cardstock, and a dead-wax engraving of the master‑lacquer code spinning with the disc. Off-center spindle by 1.5%. Highest visual ROI for the smallest amount of new code.
Same disc, but the album art on the label is color-graded — duotone copper/emerald, deeper saturation drop, vignette around the label rim. Effect: every album cover ends up looking like it came from the same pressing plant, matching the Studio Reference chrome.
Hover this card — the disc slides out of the sleeve and starts spinning. In production, this would be wired to the play/pause state: paused = tucked-in sleeve view, playing = disc revealed and spinning. Most evocative, also the most code (animation choreography + state coupling).