Redesigned Royal Mint coinage



The Royal Mint has revealed its first coinage redesigns in 40 years. A national competition was launched in 2005 attracting over 4,000 entries. The winning design was by Matthew Dent, a 26 year old London based graphic designer. He was reportedly paid £35,000 for his designs - not a bad prize, but he won't receive any royalties.

Matthew developed the heraldic theme from the most used coinage graphic – the Royal Arms.

Six of the coins (1p-50p) contains a section of the Shield of the Royal Arms and only show the whole image when placed together. The £1 coin however does feature whole image on. There's no mention of the £2 coin...

This is the first time UK coins have used the same design across and will come into circulation this summer.

Change is a scary thing for some in the UK however with a recent campaign to keep Britannia on the 50p, with a petition sent to the Royal Mint signed by over 30,000 people. Get ready to see a '2012 Olympic logo' style love-it-or-hate-it press mauling.

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