User:Azarrab/sandbox

Many thousands of unique pins have been created over the years. Pins are available for a limited time; the base price for a pin is US$9.99. Limited edition pins, and special pins (e.g. pins that have a dangle, pin-on-pin, flocking, lenticular, light-up, moving element, 3-D element, etc.) cost up to $17.99. Featured Artist and Jumbo Pins cost between $20 and $35 and Super Jumbo pins cost upwards of, and sometimes beyond, $125.

Many thousands of unique pins have been created over the years. Pins are available for a limited time; the base price for a pin is US$9.99. Limited edition pins, and special pins (e.g. pins that have a dangle, pin-on-pin, flocking, lenticular, light-up, moving element, 3-D element, etc.) cost up to $17.99. Featured Artist and Jumbo Pins cost between $20 and $35 and Super Jumbo pins cost upwards of $125.

Pin trading during COVID-19 pandemic
During the COVID-19 pandemic, the trading of pins has been modified to adhere to health guidelines. Pins will no longer be traded directly with cast members via lanyards. Instead, visitors looking to trade must locate a pin board with a nearby cast member. Between the cast member and the visitor is a sheet of plexiglass. If interested in any of the pins on the board, the visitor can exchange one of their pins for it. After the trade, the pin given to the cast member will be sanitized.

A seaweed collection album with 'Miss Mary Carrington' printed on the front is believed by its current owners to have originated in the northeastern United States, specifically Connecticut, due to publishing details on the book's binding and available information about oceanic and social conditions in the area.

Victorian gardener and author Shirley Hibberd published The Seaweed Collector, an instructional on identifying, collecting, preparing, and pressing seaweed. The victims (both murdered and body-snatched) of serial killer Ed Gein were mutilated and their pieces fashioned into clothing, accessories, furniture, and dishware, and cutlery. The wearable items were crafted in the pursuit of simulating his mother's presence.

Reception
Georgian researcher Tinatin Japaridze said about the museum, "“Stalin’s continued popularity in his native country is not so much related to Georgia’s nostalgia for the Soviet Union but rather linked to his Georgian roots, producing an inherent sense of nationalism."