Showing posts with label royal canadian mint. Show all posts
Showing posts with label royal canadian mint. Show all posts

Friday, 13 March 2015

Victoria Artist Leaves Mark On New Canadian $10 Coins!

Richard Hunt’s image on Canada’s newly minted $10 silver coin shows a mother eagle giving a minnow to her eaglet, while the father flies toward them carrying a salmon. 

Richard Hunt holds a $10 silver coin, the third coin he has created for the Royal Canadian Mint. The coin's design is based on Hunt's artwork, Mother Feeding Baby.   
 
Called Mother Feeding Baby, it highlights the value of the family and also recognizes the importance of the eagle to the renowned Victoria artist, who now has three of his artistic creations emblazoned on Canadian coins. 

“The eagle is the main crest of our village,” said Hunt, whose family is Kwakwaka’-wakw and is based in Fort Rupert, near Port Hardy. The coin — the third Hunt has created for the Royal Canadian Mint — contains a hologram, what the mint calls a combination of aboriginal art and modern technology. 

It was produced last week in a run of 10,000. The design is based on a print Hunt created in 2007 to give to people involved in a Big Brothers Big Sisters of Victoria golf tournament. “There’s 180 prints,” he said. “The edition was never sold. It was given away.” 

Hunt’s relationship with the mint began when the Crown corporation contacted him about using his work for a coin minted in 2005. That coin showed two native groups coming together, while a second one he designed in 2012 to mark the 25th anniversary of the loonie featured two loons kissing.

 “The good thing about the mint is they’re using native people instead of people that do native art,” Hunt said. “I’m just glad that they picked my work; they like my work.” Hunt did not want to disclose his financial arrangement with the mint, but said that is not his focus.

 “It’s more prestige.” This year’s specially designed and packaged hologram coins sell for $79.95 each. Such collector coins can technically be used as money, but they would be worth only their face value. 

Michael Tarantino of AAA Stamp Coin Jewellery said the new Hunt coin is available at his Fort Street store, but they could be bought up quickly. Similar coins from the mint routinely sell out, he said. “That’s actually what drives the market,” said Tarantino, whose store is the official outlet for the mint in B.C. 

“They sell out and you didn’t get one, so then you have to go look for it on a secondary market. “It makes it kind of fun that there’s a bit of a hunt to it.” Hunt, 63, has built a huge reputation as a carver of gold, silver and wood, and is also an accomplished painter. 

Art has been a passion for most of his life. “I’ve done this for 50 years,” he said. That includes time at Thunderbird Park under the tutelage of his late father, Henry, as an apprentice carver. 

He went on to serve as chief carver in the park’s carving program for 12 years before striking out on his own. Over the years, he has been awarded the Order of B.C., the Order of Canada and an honorary doctorate from the University of Victoria. 

His UVic doctorate came in 2004, 21 years after his father received the same recognition. Hunt’s art will be front and centre again next month when his Dancing Heron design appears on Times Colonist 10K T-shirts. 

Friday, 24 October 2014

2014 Maple Leaves Silver Coin Glows in the Dark!

A new and unique collectible from the Royal Canadian Mint is its proof 2014 $20 Maple Leaves silver coin, featuring autumn coloring by day and a glow-in-the-dark appearance by night.

                                      2014 $20 Maple Leaves Glow-in-the-Dark Silver Coin

Struck in one-ounce of 99.99% pure silver and limited to 7,500 with 92% already sold, the $20 silver coin uses technology that unveils a single maple leaf when viewed in the dark.

Appearance of coin when removed from natural light

In normal lighting and as designed by Canadian artist Celia Godkin, the coin offers a striking view of sugar maple leaves in their autumn colors with reds, oranges and yellow tints.

It’s "a beautiful gift for someone who enjoys the colours of autumn mixed with a fun glow-in-the-dark maple leave," describes the Mint.

Surrounding the maple leaves are inscriptions of 20 DOLLARS, 9999, FINE SILVER 1 OZ ARGENT PUR and the artist’s initials of CF.

Obverses offer the Susanna Blunt effigy of Queen Elizabeth II with encircling inscriptions of ELIZABETH II, CANADA and DG REGINA.

2014 $20 Maple Leaves Glow-in-the-Dark Silver Coins are available from the Royal Canadian Mint via its website of www.mint.ca or by calling 1-800-267-1871 in Canada or 1-800-268-6468 in the United States. An affiliate link to Mint’s product page for the coin is found hereicon.

Priced at CAD $104.95, or about US $93.25, coins ship encapsulated and in a Royal Canadian Mint-branded maroon clam shell with custom beauty box.

Monday, 13 October 2014

Latest RCM $20 for $20 Silver Coin Features Snowman!

The Royal Canadian Mint has started accepting orders for the latest release within their “$20 for $20″ silver coin program, which offers a 99.99% pure silver coin for its legal tender face value of $20.

Canadian Snowman $20 Silver Coin

The reverse design for the new coin features a fanciful interpretation of a snowman. He is pictured within a snowdrift wearing a winter scarf and hat completed with a carrot nose and broad smiling mouth. 

His spindly arms made of sticks help him to take part in the great winter tradition of the snowball fight. The design is by Jesse Koreck. Inscriptions read “Canada 2014″, “Fine Silver Argent Pur 9999″, and the denomination of “20 Dollars”.

On the obverse of each coin is the effigy of Queen Elizabeth II designed by Susanna Blunt. Inscriptions include “Elizabeth II” and “D G Regina”.

Each coin is struck in 99.99% pure silver and carries a specimen quality finish. The weight is 7.96 grams and the diameter is 27 mm with a serrated edge. 

A maximum mintage of 200,000 coins has been established with an ordering limit of three coins per household. The coins are priced at their legal tender face value of $20 each with free ground shipping.

Monday, 11 August 2014

The Royal Canadian Mint has announced the second issue of the “Birds of Prey” silver bullion & collector coin series featuring one of the most recognized and synonymous species of wildlife associated with the North American continent, that of the Bald eagle.


Revered in both Canada and the United States, this raptor, once included on the endangered species list, has made a remarkable recovery, thanks to the vigilance of many wildlife associations and public education leading to the protection of their environments enabling them to reach greater numbers.

When it comes to hunting, the bald eagle’s most important assets are its eyes, its talons, and its exceptional diving speed. Eagle vision is about six times stronger than that of humans.

In addition, transparent nictitating membranes on their eyes allow eagles to “blink” without losing sight of prey for even a moment. The eagle’s claws are its key tool for hunting, nest building and more. Composed of three front toes and one back toe, all tipped with long keratinous talons.

Its claws are connected to tendons in the eagle’s legs and feet that allow it to clamp down on captured prey with crushing force. Once the hunter has spotted the day’s catch, it will dive at speeds in excess of 120 kilometers per hour, snatching its prey from the water or ground with lightning speed.

Eagles can live up to 30 years in the wild and will as circumstances allow, mate for life. It is the male who predominantly builds the nest and invites the female to share a new home.

Eagle couples will raise their young, usually two or three eggs, together, taking it in turns to incubate and after their young are hatched, will both hunt and share in their feeding and protection.

Eagle parents will continue to feed their juvenile eaglets even after they fledge and pass on their survival skills of hunting and until they fly away to live their life of soaring the skies and beginning the cycle of life once again in safer ecological conditions.

The coin, designed by Emily Damstra depicts a bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) just having caught a fish. The eagle dominates the image, its stunning wings spread wide in flight as it is viewed in full-body profile from its left side.

The bald eagle’s characteristic dark body and wings, white head and tail, and powerful legs and talons are prominently featured. The obverse includes the current portrait of HM Queen Elizabeth II as designed by Susanna Blunt and in use on all circulation and most commemorative Canadian coins since 2003.

Denomination    Metal           Weight          Dimensions    Quality    Mintage
5 Dollars           .999 silver    31.3 grams    38 mm.           Proof       7500 pieces
5 Dollars           .999 silver    31.3 grams    38 mm.           Bullion    1,000,000

This coin is encapsulated and presented in a Royal Canadian Mint-branded maroon clamshell with black beauty box. The first coin in this series, featuring the Peregrine Falcon and launched in February 2014, is now approaching a sell-out of its mintage of one million bullion-strike coins.

This issue also includes a mintage of one million pieces struck as a bullion-related item which is available for purchase through retail channels.