# How to Build Your Own NFT Record on Ethereum *Author: William M. Peaster* *Published: May 14, 2026* *Source: https://www.bankless.com/read/build-your-own-ethereum-nft-record* --- If you're wanting to mint NFTs of your own creations *today*, you've still got solid options. My first all-around recommendation to anyone, for almost any type of NFT project, would be [Manifold](https://manifold.xyz/), considering its flexible suite. [Transient](https://www.transient.xyz/) and [Sealed](https://sealed.art/) are good alternatives here, too. But let's say you've created releases across all sorts of Ethereum platforms over the years. It's true for me: I've dropped NFTs on +20 separate EVM platforms since late 2019. Minting has been easy enough, but *organizing *mints, whether for archiving or better discoverability or both, has long been a pain because of this sort of fragmentation. That's because no platform currently indexes *all *your creations correctly, at least not out of the gate. Things slip along the wayside. *Or* platforms index creations that you forgot about, that you don't consider authoritative anymore, and that you wouldn't want to highlight for posterity. All that said, it'd be nice to have the ability to DIY assemble your own "official" record of your creative works on Ethereum. This way you'd always have a definitive oeuvre prepped to share around and to bring with you to new onchain platforms to cover their default gaps. Fortunately, one new resource offers us the ability to do precisely this, and it's [**Catalog**](https://pnd.ripe.wtf/catalog)**.** > an artist should be able to publish a public record of where their work lives on ethereumand any interface should be able to read from itCatalog.solno more rebuilding your work history inside every new tool or platform [pic.twitter.com/TmGUGFwiB4](https://t.co/TmGUGFwiB4)— ripe (@ripe0x) [May 14, 2026](https://twitter.com/ripe0x/status/2054901424064979187?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw) As those of you who read my article "[Salvaging Foundation's Art](https://www.bankless.com/read/the-cryptoart-community-is-salvaging-foundations-art)" may recall, ripe is an onchain artist ([TBAM](https://tbam.ripe.wtf/), [Value Discovery](https://value.ripe.wtf/), etc.) who's recently been working on [PND](https://pnd.ripe.wtf/), a frontend that began as a path for migrating works from Foundation but has quickly evolved into a full platform where artists can preserve their NFTs, deploy DIY auctions that they earn 100% from, and so on. It's an awesome resource already, and ripe has steadily been expanding its features. The latest addition here is the Catalog [smart contract](https://x.com/ripe0x/status/2054901424064979187) + [simple UI](https://x.com/i/status/2055001727804301371) combo. It lets any artist publish a permanent, self-curated record of their releases on Ethereum. Designate pointers to the contracts or specific tokens you want to recognize, and voila, they're readable by any interface from then on. For example, there's an Aug. 2020 collection I minted on a platform called InfiNFT (which offered simultaneous onchain + IPFS + Arweave mints) that I'd like to attest to, as I made the pieces by handpainting over Generative Adversarial Network (GAN) collages I'd assembled, thus they represent some of my earliest AI art experiments onchain and show I'm not some recent tourist to AI creativity. To do this attesting, I just copied the collection's address (which I found on OpenSea), pasted it in [my artist catalog page](https://pnd.ripe.wtf/catalog/0x08ceb8bba685ee708c9c4c65576837cbe19b9dea) with the "All tokens on this contract" option selected, and then pressed the "Add to catalog" button and confirmed the input transaction with my wallet. That's all it took, and now this series is officially authorized in my personal onchain record. [![](https://storage.ghost.io/c/e4/b7/e4b77544-5a37-4f0b-8824-8440aa348476/content/images/2026/05/image-30.png)](https://pnd.ripe.wtf/catalog/0x08ceb8bba685ee708c9c4c65576837cbe19b9dea)This might seem like a niche resource, but it's definitely useful for anyone who's been active as an NFT creator before, and we'll likely see humans and AI agents increasingly turning to registries like this over time for a variety of reasons, including secondary trades. I could also easily see this infra being separately generalized for *curation*, e.g. onchain lists for onchain things like "The Best Cryptoart of 2026" or etc. For now we'll have to wait and see where ripe takes Catalog from here, though consider the feature for your creative toolbox in the meantime.