USE CODE BLKFRI25 for an additional 25% Off.
Own a rare, gallery-grade print of the album cover from Ghetto Millionaires — limited, numbered, and hand-signed by Danny Hastings and Royal Flush.
In 1997, Danny Hastings captured the official album cover for Ghetto Millionaires, the breakout street classic from Queens, NY, by Royal Flush — a rapper known for gritty lyricism, hustler charisma, and unfiltered New York energy.
This is not a reproduction.
This is an authentic, hand-crafted darkroom print made using the traditional chromogenic photographic process.
🎞 Real darkroom print — NOT inkjet
Each piece is chemically developed as an Archival Chromogenic (Silver Halide) Print to deliver:
✔ Continuous tone color (no dots, no sprays, no pixels)
✔ Deep, rich color with real photographic depth
✔ Museum-grade archival longevity
✔ A true, classic darkroom photographic surface
📌 EXTREMELY Limited Edition — Only 20 prints exist worldwide
This exclusive collaboration between photographer and artist makes this one of the rarest hip-hop fine-art print drops.
✍️ Each print is individually:
— Numbered (1–20)
— Signed by Danny Hastings & Royal Flush
— Stamped and authenticated from Danny Hastings Studio
📜 Includes Official Certificate of Authenticity (COA)
Featuring:
— Purchaser’s name
— Print edition number
— Signature verification from Danny Hastings Studio
🎁 Perfect for collectors, galleries, and real hip-hop heads who understand the impact of Queens rap culture and 90s street documentation.
🔥 BLACK FRIDAY SALE ONLY
🗓 Available exclusively Black Friday
— Print Drop goes live on Black Friday
— First come, first served
— This is the ONLY release window
— Once they’re gone, the edition is permanently closed
📦 Free Shipping in the U.S.A., International Shipping Fee will apply
Technical Print Quality Section
What is an Archival Chromogenic Print?
A chromogenic print (also referred to as a silver halide print or dye-coupler print) is a true color photographic print created from a color negative or transparency and developed using the chromogenic process. Unlike inkjet, chromogenic prints are produced through chemical color development, resulting in:
— Continuous tone color (no dots, no pixels, no spray patterns)
— Superior archival stability
— Rich, deep color saturation
— A true darkroom photographic surface
This printing method is widely used for museum collections, gallery exhibitions, and fine-art photographic preservation.