Royal Mint unveils new coinage portrait of the Queen

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The Royal Mint has unveiled a new coinage portrait of the Queen.

It shows a side profile of the 88-year-old monarch wearing a crown and drop earrings.

It is only the fifth definitive coin portrait to have been created during her 63-year reign.

Coins featuring the new image will go into production from Monday but will only appear in circulation later this year.


Royal Mint unveils new coinage portrait of the Queen


2 March 2015
BBC News



The Queen's new portrait on the £2 coin. Gordon Summers, Royal Mint Chief Engraver: "It's a classical design"


The Royal Mint has unveiled a new coinage portrait of the Queen.

It shows a side profile of the 88-year-old monarch wearing a crown and drop earrings.

It is only the fifth definitive coin portrait to have been created during her 63-year reign.

Coins featuring the new image will go into production from Monday but will only appear in circulation later this year.

The portrait was designed by Royal Mint engraver Jody Clark, whose design was selected in a competition organised by the Royal Mint Advisory Committee, a consultative panel to HM Treasury.


Four official portraits of the Queen have already appeared on coins in 1953, 1968, 1985 and 1998 with the monarch, of course, progressively ageing in each one


Engraver Jody Clark (shown with the new portrait in the background) said he hoped the design was a "fitting representation"


Mr Clark, 34, said: "I hope that I've done Her Majesty justice and captured her as I intended, in a fitting representation.

"The news that my design had been chosen was quite overwhelming, and I still can't quite believe that my royal portrait will be featured on millions of coins."

Adam Lawrence, chief executive of the Royal Mint, said the change of royal portrait made 2015 a "vintage year" for UK coins.

He added: "Capturing a portrait on the surface of a coin demands the utmost skill, and is one of the most challenging disciplines of the coin designer's art."

The winning art work was recommended to the Chancellor, and then the Queen, for final approval.


The 1,100 year old Royal Mint is currently situated in Llantrisant, Mid Glamorgan. As well as minting coins for the UK, the Royal Mint also mints and exports coins to many other countries and produces military medals, commemorative medals and other such items for governments, schools and businesses, being known as the world's leading exporting mint. It minted the London 2012 Olympics medals



BBC News - Royal Mint unveils new coinage portrait of the Queen
 
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