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Circulating keepsakes: The design process of a commemorative circulation coin

  • Aug 13, 2024
  • Learn
  • 5 MINUTES READ

For more than 80 years, we’ve issued special circulation coins to help Canadians celebrate, remember, honour or reflect upon the events and people who have shaped our nation’s history and heritage. It’s a tradition that began during the Second World War with the famous Victory Nickel (1943-45), and it’s something we plan on doing for as long as there are stories to tell.

In recent years, Canadian commemorative circulation coins have become a colourful lot. Red, green, yellow and blue—we keep finding new ways to experiment with colour since introducing the world’s first coloured circulation piece in 2004, the 25-cent Poppy coin. Many of our recent commemorative circulation pieces also include a painted element that adds a pop of colour to your pocket change.

Colour is a powerful tool for ensuring these coins and their themes are immediately recognizable. And no, it’s not a gimmick: colours have inherent emotional and psychological meaning, and tinting just one design element can spin a story in a whole new way and even change your interpretation.

It’s all part of our efforts to innovate the art of minting, and it truly is an artform. But whether coloured or struck (engraved only), the process for choosing a design for each commemorative circulation coin is (mostly) the same.

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For more than 80 years, we’ve issued special circulation coins to help Canadians celebrate, remember, honour or reflect upon the events and people who have shaped our nation’s history and heritage. It’s a tradition that began during the Second World War with the famous Victory Nickel (1943-45), and it’s something we plan on doing for as long as there are stories to tell.

In recent years, Canadian commemorative circulation coins have become a colourful lot. Red, green, yellow and blue—we keep finding new ways to experiment with colour since introducing the world’s first coloured circulation piece in 2004, the 25-cent Poppy coin. Many of our recent commemorative circulation pieces also include a painted element that adds a pop of colour to your pocket change.

Colour is a powerful tool for ensuring these coins and their themes are immediately recognizable. And no, it’s not a gimmick: colours have inherent emotional and psychological meaning, and tinting just one design element can spin a story in a whole new way and even change your interpretation.

It’s all part of our efforts to innovate the art of minting, and it truly is an artform. But whether coloured or struck (engraved only), the process for choosing a design for each commemorative circulation coin is (mostly) the same.

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Celebrating Oscar Peterson coin designer Valentine De Landro
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