{
    "attributes": [
        {
            "trait_type": "Character",
            "value": "Nuke Adam"
        },
        {
            "trait_type": "Bomb Type",
            "value": "Classic"
        },
        {
            "trait_type": "Colorway",
            "value": "Nuke Pink"
        },
        {
            "trait_type": "Distribution",
            "value": "Unreleased"
        },
        {
            "trait_type": "Spark",
            "value": "No"
        },
        {
            "trait_type": "Branded",
            "value": "No"
        },
        {
            "trait_type": "Background Name",
            "value": "Plaid"
        },
        {
            "trait_type": "Background Colorway",
            "value": "Purple-Yellow"
        },
        {
            "trait_type": "Background Branded",
            "value": "No"
        },
        {
            "trait_type": "Error Terror",
            "value": "No"
        },
        {
            "trait_type": "Double Trouble",
            "value": "No"
        },
        {
            "trait_type": "Broken Background",
            "value": "No"
        }
    ],
    "description": "Bomb Story: Nuke Adam is part of a larger T-shirt graphic, \"\"Our Friend,\"\" that was inspired by an old-school science textbook. Adam is a sparkless nucleus of an \u2014 get this \u2014 atom. Since his name is derived from \u201catom bomb,\u201d it\u2019s one of the few times we\u2019ve referenced that facet of his personality. The original art features a hand hovering around the atom and you can still see a sliver of a finger in the bottom right corner.| Background Story: \r\nOriginating in Scotland as \"\"tartan,\"\" we now call this pattern of crisscrossed lines \"\"Plaid.\"\" Growing up in Southern California during the '80s and '90s, plaid beach volleyball shorts were always in our purview, thanks to labels like Mossimo and St\u00fcssy. When we elevated to making cut-n-sew apparel like button-ups in the early 2000s, plaids made their way into our language as a nod to both the surf culture of the West Coast and Polo's influence on the East. In fact, every plaid speaks to a different subculture. Buffalo plaids were woven into the early New York hip-hop lumberjacks. Shadow plaids on swap meet Pendletons. And The Hundreds plaids, for all.",
    "external_url": "https://abs.thehundreds.com/?bomb=18449",
    "image": "https://nervous.mypinata.cloud/ipfs/QmatHos3sX8dDpzdfaDvpn21vQ8q2xSXHhzC5P7WfgxHg2/18449.png",
    "title": "Bomb #18449"
}