Taylor Swift fans have bought cigarette butts, water bottle caps, and even an ovulation kit which were found discarded outside Madison Square Garden on the day of her wedding.
The Love Story married Travis Kelce at the New York sporting arena last Friday (03.07.26) and enterprising artist Justin Gignac visited the site to pick up discarded items before packing them in small, see-through plastic cubes.
He has now sold out of his collection of over 1,300 trash packages, which were priced at $25 plus $10 postage and have been dispatched to 30 countries.
The cubes were branded 'New York City Garbage: JusT+T Married' and 'Not Invited Edition (Taylor + Travis' Wedding)'.
The online listing read: "There's garbage on the floor after the party. Collected from the edge of a love story outside Madison Square Garden, as close to Taylor + Travis' big day as you could've gotten without an invite. This is the debut of Pocket Garbage, so you can carry a piece of the greatest day of your... I mean, their lives, wherever you go."
Fans were unable to specify which piece of souvenir debris they wanted to buy, but were reassured the package wouldn't "leak or smell".
The listing stated: "This debut release of Pocket Garbage is adorably sized, so you two will never be apart. It was all hand-picked by the artist, Justin Gignac, in a full tuxedo, outside of Madison Square Garden on 7/3/26.
"These mini NYC Garbage cubes (1" x 1" x .75") contain a variety of left behind items like cigarette butts, water bottle caps, caution tape, pieces of a rainbow fan, straws, utensils, an ovulation test kit, a ring pop, and one left AirPod.
"Many of these items have been tied in knots to really nail that wedding theme.
"Each sculpture is carefully arranged and sealed so it won’t leak or smell. And signed by Justin at the bottom.
"HEADS UP: Your cube will be thoughtfully (and randomly) selected by the artist. Sorry, no requests—only telepathy. Use your crystals, totems, and vision boards to manifest the one you want."
Justin wore a tuxedo and toted a litter picker as he gathered up the garbage outside the venue.
He quipped on the listing page: "Did people think I was a wedding guest who decided to clean up the streets after leaving the party? Yes, yes, they did."
The artist previously sold limited-edition garbage cubes to commemorate other big occasions in the city over the years, including the New York Giants’ 2012 championship parade and the Yankees’ 2009 parade.