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Home / Travel

Mask company makes custom coverings that look like your face

NZ Herald
16 Jul, 2020 04:29 AM3 mins to read
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The face behind the 'selfie' mask: Daniel Baskin. Photo / Supplied, @djbaskin

The face behind the 'selfie' mask: Daniel Baskin. Photo / Supplied, @djbaskin

With travel companies and countries around the world finally coming down on the side of mandatory facial coverings in public, many feel anxious that surgical masks eroding their individuality. Fortunately one artist turned-accidental-entrepreneur has come up with a solution to social hygiene that is as idiosyncratic as you are.

Unsurprisingly these custom 'Face ID Masks' began as a practical joke. With surgical masks printed to order from selfie photos, the company began taking orders on the website "Resting Risk Face.com" in June.

Using user submitted photos the company makes facial coverings that match your features and skin tone – with the pledge to make the wearer "more easily recognisable during viral pandemics."

Personalised masks have turned out to be a huge hit. Photo / Supplied, @djbaskin
Personalised masks have turned out to be a huge hit. Photo / Supplied, @djbaskin

The result is uncanny. Apparently the coverings are convincing enough to "unlock devices" using facial recognition.

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For artist Danielle Baskin the project had started "just for fun".

The lesson I keep learning: if you work on companies just for fun outside your companies, those also turn into companies.

— Danielle Baskin (@djbaskin) June 28, 2020

The maker from San Francisco describes herself as a maker of "viral art, companies and delightfully weird events".

However her latest enterprise has turned out to be as multi-faceted as she is. The website has also been used to create masks using celebrity mugshots and even the face of a fragmented 2000 year old sculpture from the Met Galley collections.

Artworks and celebrities have all been given the mask treatment. Photo / Supplied, @djbaskin
Artworks and celebrities have all been given the mask treatment. Photo / Supplied, @djbaskin

Since launching the website in June she's received over 25000 orders.

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I woke up this morning to learn that the Today Show aired my Maskalike face masks (without a heads up). Then NBC news. Then it spread through the internet for the 4th time. I got several emails per minute. Now I have >25,100 people on the waitlist and 1,225 unanswered emails.🤯 https://t.co/yQWN9a46C9 pic.twitter.com/3NubjtQ4xt

— Danielle Baskin (@djbaskin) June 28, 2020

"The lesson I keep learning: if you work on companies just for fun outside your companies, those also turn into companies," she said.

Since her masks found viral fame Baskin says she's recognised everywhere. (Well, she can hardly hide.) The Face ID masks have earned appearances on US television, including NBC and the Ellen DeGeneres show.

Here’s my demo. pic.twitter.com/BIVA0B53NJ

— Danielle Baskin (@djbaskin) June 13, 2020

Part of the proceeds have been donated to the TGI Justice Project which is a California-based project for transgender, gender variant and intersex justice.

Masks: What behind the change in attitude

It seems to have been the perfect time to launch the project. Since March 120 countries have introduced laws encouraging people to wear face coverings in public.

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As of this week it is now a legal requirement for people in the UK to wear masks on public transport and in shops. Four days ago the US president Donald Trump wore a mask during a public appearance, after initial vocal opposition to wearing face masks.

It seems that the Covid 19 pandemic has changed not only laws but peoples' attitudes have changed towards face masks.

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