The final coin design with colour inlay. A truly Distinctly Australian coin.
Photo Credit: Courtesy of The Royal Australian Mint
The reverse side of the iconic coin, as seen through a microscope.
Photo Credit: Nick Cubbin/Australian Geographic
To visualise the obverse and reverse sides of the coin AG illustrator Jim Tsinganos (left) works closely with coin designer Aleksandra Stokic.
Photo Credit: Nick Cubbin/Australian Geographic
The reverse die mould of the coin. Made in negative and cut with precision by lasers the mould becomes the master tool in creating the coins.
Photo Credit: Nick Cubbin/Australian Geographic
A laser cuts the die of the coin.
Photo Credit: Nick Cubbin/Australian Geographic
Every struck coin is scrutinised for quality before having the coloured insert added
Photo Credit: Nick Cubbin/Australian Geographic
Distinctly Australian begins to take shape with draft versions of the icons poster being incorporated into the coin dimensions.
Photo Credit: Nick Cubbin/Australian Geographic
AG illustrator Jim Tsinganos and Aleksandra Stokic decide on elements to include on the coin.
Photo Credit: Nick Cubbin/Australian Geographic
Coin designer Aleksandra Stokic then sculpts the design into plaster before the concept is submitted to Treasury for approval.
Photo Credit: Nick Cubbin/Australian Geographic
Coin designer Aleksandra Stokic works on the sculptured reverse of the coin. The centre image will hold the Queen’s effigy, but instead of showing the denomination like on a normal coins, the Queen is surrounded by sprigs of iconic wattle.
Photo Credit: Nick Cubbin/Australian Geographic
Tools of the trade. Sculpting tools used by coin designer Aleksandra Stokic in the creation of the final design which is sent to Treasury for approval before the striking of the coins can begin.
Photo Credit: Nick Cubbin/Australian Geographic
The entry to the Royal Australian Mint, Canberra, ACT.
Photo Credit: Nick Cubbin/Australian Geographic
The inside of the mint resembles a science lab – complete with lab coats and microscopes.
Photo Credit: Nick Cubbin/Australian Geographic
AG illustrator Jim Tsinganos inspects the reverse side of a struck coin, similar in size to Distinctly Australian.
For our 100th issue in October 2010, we invited celebrated Sydney artist Jim Tsinganos to weave a list of 100 national icons into a painting that would artfully incorporate all our true blue Australian emblems into a single image. In late 2013, the icons poster was spotted by a team of coin developers at the Australian Mint, led by creative director Frederica Heacock, who were working towards a new collectors’ coin that would reflect Aussie culture. Rendering a large and detailed image onto a 38mm coin while remaining faithful to the original idea proved a challenge. The coin set has been christened Distinctly Australian and was launched on Australia Day this year. There are only 30,000 available.