Knowing the creator or a bit more context would help me track down the exact feature you're after! P. Allen Smith - Facebook
In the quaint town of Verdantville, where the sun shone bright and the soil was rich with nutrients, a group of tiny tomatoes lived secret lives. These petite tomatoes, no larger than a thumb, were known to the locals as "cherry tomatoes" or simply "tomates." But little did anyone know that these small, round fruits held extraordinary stories within them. Petite Tomato Magazine Vol.1 Vol.10.33
Today, an original copy of is worth an estimated $800–$1,200 on the rare zine market. It last sold on eBay in 2021 for $950, with the seller describing it as "smells faintly of soy sauce and ambition." Knowing the creator or a bit more context
Its strange, clunky title—Vol.1 Vol.10.33—is not a mistake. It is a rebellion against the clean, searchable, algorithmic world. In a time when every piece of content is designed to be consumed in seconds, Petite Tomato Magazine demanded that you spend an afternoon untangling its non-linear pages. These petite tomatoes, no larger than a thumb,
Petite Tomato Magazine Volume 1, Issue 10.33 focuses on the "Micro-Harvest Revolution," highlighting high-yield, vertical hydroponic gardening for small urban spaces. The issue spotlights the "Ruby Micro" cultivar and features culinary applications for miniature tomatoes in a "Deconstructed Caprese" recipe.