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Foldable.Me – Online Deal

$20 for $40 Worth of Personalized Foldables

$20
Buy
No Longer Available
Mon Dec 10 07:59:59 UTC 2012
Value
$40
Discount
50%
You Save
$20
  • T460x279
  • Good for Gifting
  • Photographic

In a Nutshell

Aided by an easy-to-use website, customers create 3.5-inch cardboard likenesses of themselves and friends

The Fine Print

  • Expires Jan 31, 2013
  • Limit 2 per person, may buy 2 additional as gifts. Limit 1 per visit. Online only. Must use promotional value in 1 visit. Not valid with other offers or discounts.
  • See the rules that apply to all deals.

Building a miniature ship inside a bottle is impressive, but not as impressive as forging a giant glass shell around yourself and waiting for your family to come home and find you. Do something crafty with this Groupon.

$20 for $40 Worth of Personalized Foldables

Using Foldable.Me’s easy-to-navigate website, customers select their cardboard likeness’s gender, hair color, eye shape, and other defining characteristics, ultimately arriving at a miniature replica of themselves or a friend. Each Foldable costs $11.99 with shipping included.

Foldable.Me

In March of 2012, a group of designers from Mint Digital in the United Kingdom created a crude prototype of Foldable.Me, a cardboard miniature standing 3.5 inches tall that can be customized to look like any person. Immediately realizing the need for dozens of hairdos, chins, eyes, and third eyes, they began a Kickstarter campaign in hopes of raising enough funds to hire an expert illustrator. Reaching their goal quickly, they launched their full site just six months later. Now, they welcome customers to Foldable.Me’s easy-to-navigate website, where guests create their own cardboard armies bearing the likenesses of themselves or their friends. Printed onto one piece of matte laminate cardboard using high-grade inks, each Foldable.Me can be assembled without the use of glue, scissors, advanced surgical training.

Groupon Says

Dem_teaser_cat

The Groupon Guide to: Dog-Show Breed Standards

With billions of viewers and ad revenue through the roof, it’s no secret that everybody loves watching dog shows. But what do they judge these pedigreed pooches on? Hint: the things in this guide:

1. Is the Dog Crying? A sad dog is never a winning dog. An exemplar of the breed should be happy and boisterous, not a gross crying mess. Plus, the only dogs even capable of crying are genetic aberrations.

2. Has the Dog Eaten a Judge’s Finger During the Process? Only one dog (a mastiff named Grandmaster Waddlesplint) has ever won after consuming a judge’s finger. (It was only a pinky.)

3. General Dogliness: Is this really a dog? Not a pile of ants or a popular wooden toy? How much of a dog is the dog? Like, way dog or just some dog? This is generally the most important.

4. Telepathy Test: No dog has ever passed this test, but judges are holding out hope.

5. Pick Your Favorite: None of this matters. The judges just pick their favorite dog.

Is that dog really a dog?