More than a marketplace.
An exhibition space, a permanent provenance archive, a payment terminal, and a piece of trade infrastructure that reaches into the physical world. Six questions. Plain answers.
What is this?
A Victorian coin passes through eight hands over 140 years. Each owner knows the piece. None of them know the others. By the time it reaches the auction house, its history — the collections it graced, the prices it fetched, the hands it passed through — is gone.
The Collectors Emporium exists to end that.
It is, first and foremost, an exhibition space and permanent archive. Every item listed here receives a digital identity — stored on IPFS, the distributed storage network used by archivists, libraries, and institutions worldwide. Not on a server that can be shut down. Not in a database that can be deleted or altered. Permanently. Publicly. Verifiably. The record exists independently of this platform, independently of any company, and outlasts any technology change.
What you can attach to any item's permanent record — and there is no limit to what you include:
All of this is held permanently on IPFS — and every item gets its own individual QR code, generated and baked into the record at the moment of listing. Print it on a label, a display card, a lot tag, a shelf ticket, a frame backing, a storage box. Anyone who scans it — anywhere in the world, on any phone, without installing an app — sees the complete record: every image, every document, every piece of history, the current asking price if the item is listed for sale, and the full ownership chain recorded on the public XRP Ledger.
That QR code is the item's permanent address in the physical world. It works in your display cabinet. At a craft fair table. At an auction lot. In a photograph online. In a printed catalogue. In a museum information card. Wherever the item goes, the QR goes with it. The record is permanent. The QR never expires.
It also functions as a marketplace — direct XRP payments settling in three seconds with no intermediary. A payment terminal at any physical venue. An escrow service for high-value transactions. A showcase auction with live bidding. And a territory-based commercial network for those who want more than individual sales.
It is a Swiss army knife for anyone who takes physical objects seriously.
How does it work?
From listing to permanent record in four steps. The process is entirely self-service — no approval, no account manager, no waiting period.
Once a sale completes, the ownership record on the XRP Ledger updates automatically. The item's next owner sees the complete history — including the transaction that transferred it to them. The QR code on the physical object remains the same. The record it points to now includes them.
What does it do?
Everything the Emporium does today, live on mainnet:
- Create permanent IPFS records with full multimedia archives — images, video, audio, documents, certificates, attestations, historical papers, HTML pages, anything you can upload
- Generate an individual QR code for every listing, baked in at the moment of creation — print and attach to any physical item, display, or storage
- List items for sale with XRP — direct wallet to wallet, three-second settlement, no intermediary, no merchant account required
- List items for exhibition only — display your collection publicly, with full documentation, without setting a price or revealing your location or personal details
- Switch any item between exhibition and for-sale at any time — without creating a new record or changing the QR code
- Browse the full catalogue by territory — district, county, country, or region — or by category and sub-category
- Search for dealers, collectors, and listings in any geographic area, worldwide
- Verify any item's complete provenance and ownership history via its QR code, from anywhere in the world
- Enter the Showcase Auction — bid for the featured position on the Emporium homepage; your prime item holds the spotlight and your entire collection is displayed alongside it, visible to every visitor who arrives at the front door
- Claim a territory node — district, county, country, region, or category; receive a percentage of the transfer fee from every NFU resale in that territory, automatically, directly to your wallet, on the XRP Ledger
No card reader. No 2.9% Visa fee. No merchant account. No monthly subscription. No listing fee. No seller registration or approval process. No fee to exhibit, browse, or use the territory system.
There is one cost, and it applies only to sales: a transfer fee — a percentage of the sale price, collected automatically by the XRP Ledger at the moment of every secondary sale. It is set when the item is first listed, shown clearly to buyers before they commit, and collected by the protocol itself — not by a payment processor or platform intermediary.
The transfer fee is the single mechanism that funds the entire platform. It covers IPFS storage, the QR code system, exhibition and browsing infrastructure, territory management, the showcase auction, escrow services, and the automatic redistribution of fees to every node holder in the geographic chain above a sale.
Everything else — uploading documents, exhibiting your collection, browsing other listings, managing your territory, using your QR codes — is part of what the platform provides. No additional charges. The fee is the platform fee, paid once per sale, transparently, on-chain, verifiable by anyone.
For a dealer used to paying 2.9% card fees plus a card reader plus monthly subscription costs, plus three-day clearing and occasional chargebacks, the comparison is worth making.
What can it do?
The platform is in soft launch. The full feature set is being activated progressively. Here is what is coming — and why each capability matters to collectors, dealers, and anyone who trades physical objects.
- Escrow for high-value items. Buyer funds held on the XRP Ledger until physical delivery is confirmed by both parties. No PayPal disputes. No chargeback risk. No relying on the seller's good faith alone. The ledger holds the payment; release is triggered when both parties confirm receipt. For high-value coins, watches, jewellery, or antiques — where trust between strangers matters — this changes the risk equation entirely.
- Craft fair and market stall payments. Your QR code on your display is your payment terminal. A buyer scans, confirms in Xaman, and the payment is in your wallet before they put their phone away. No card reader. No 2.9% Visa fee. No merchant account. No declined transactions. No end-of-day reconciliation. Works anywhere there is a phone signal — a village hall craft fair, a car boot sale, a specialist antiques fair, a market stall, a private viewing.
- Auction lot integration. Every lot at a physical or online auction carries its Emporium QR — provenance visible during bidding, payment settled digitally the moment the hammer falls, IPFS record updated with the auction result and new owner. The lot's history grows with each event.
- Complete dealer catalogues. Every item in stock listed, documented, and QR-coded. Your entire inventory searchable by district and category. Buyers anywhere in the world can browse your collection, verify provenance, and purchase — without visiting you in person. Your catalogue is open twenty-four hours a day.
- Cross-border sales. XRP settles to any wallet in the world in three seconds. No international wire fees. No currency conversion delays. No restrictions on cross-border transaction amounts. The buyer in Tokyo pays the seller in Edinburgh as easily as a local sale.
- Territory node holders as local market-makers. A district or category node holder may choose to offer their local knowledge to sellers in their area — introductions, listing guidance, or first look at new stock. This is entirely optional and self-directed; the platform is fully self-service and no node holder is required as an intermediary. Those who choose to engage with their district build a local presence on-chain that grows in value as the territory grows in activity.
- Territory appreciation. As more dealers list in a district and more buyers transact there, the volume of transfer fees flowing through that district node grows. The node itself — a permanent, transferable, on-chain asset — increases in commercial value as its territory becomes more active. The node holder benefits from growth they did not necessarily generate directly.
- Ownership chain continuity. When a listed item sells and the buyer eventually re-lists it, the new listing inherits the complete provenance chain. The QR code on the physical item accumulates history with each transfer. A piece traded through the Emporium five times carries five chapters of verifiable record.
How can I use it?
There are four ways to participate. They are not mutually exclusive — most active users combine more than one.
Your physical location, your identity, and your contact details remain entirely private. No one knows where you are or who you are from the listing alone. If you decide to sell at any point, you switch the listing on. If you change your mind, you switch it off. The record and QR code persist regardless.
For collectors with cherished pieces that simply deserve to be seen — that deserve a proper permanent record — the Emporium is an exhibition centre first.
For a full dealer catalogue, the process is identical for every item. Each piece gets its own permanent record, its own QR code, and its own place in the Emporium's searchable directory.
To understand the full opportunity — node levels, pricing, and the fee mechanics in detail — see node levels and pricing, or the full protocol explanation at paym8s.world.
Which one to choose?
If you are not sure where you fit, this is a plain guide.