Posts

Showing posts with the label collectors’ coin

The Ox silver coin sale delayed!

Image
  Announced to release 29th January Initially it was announced to release on January 8, now it is differed. Perth Mint said in a note that, “there is a delay on the production of this product. Any order containing this product will be dispatched by mid-January.” Yet the date of releasing is announce, Friday 29th January 2021.   With its creative use of opal in the shape of an ox, this pure silver coin is a terrific memento for those celebrating the 2021 Chinese New Year and everyone born under the influence of the second animal of the ancient lunar calendar. Australia supplies the overwhelming majority of the world’s opal, a colourful mineral-like material that has proved extremely popular as in insert in several Perth Mint collectables. With previous coins in the Opal Lunar series sold out, expectations are high that this year’s ox design will prove equally successful.   Opal Design: The coin’s reverse incorporates an inner panel design of an ox detailed in pure Australian opal. I

Innovation coin purchase from December 30

Image
The US Mint coin priced at $11.50 Honoring Maryland American Innovation   The 2020 United States Mint (Mint) American Innovation $1 Reverse Proof Coin honoring Maryland will be available for purchase on December 30 at noon EST. The coin is priced at $11.50. Orders will be limited to five coins per household for the first 24 hours on sale. Production is limited to 50,000 coins.   The American Innovation $1 Coin Program is a multi-year series featuring distinctive reverse (tails) designs that pay homage to America’s ingenuity and celebrate the pioneering efforts of individuals or groups from all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and the U.S. territories. The reverse of the Maryland American Innovation $1 Reverse Proof Coin recognizes the Hubble Space Telescope, one of the largest and most versatile space telescopes. The telescope is managed by teams at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s Goddard Space Flight Center and the Space Telescope Science Institute, both lo