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The Royal Mint Celebrates The Ever Popular Alice's Adventures In Wonderland On Official UK Coin

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CCFPress's Avatar
United States
1420 Posts
 Posted 07/12/2021  09:54 am Show Profile   Bookmark this topic Add CCFPress to your friends list Get a Link to this Message Number of Subscribers
The Royal Mint - The Royal Mint celebrates the ever-popular Alice's Adventures in Wonderland on official UK coin for the first time.

The-Royal-Mint-Celebrates-The-Ever-Popular-Alice's-Adventures-In-Wonderland-On-Official-UK-Coin

The Royal Mint celebrates Alice's Adventures in Wonderland on official UK coin in collaboration with the Victoria and Albert Museum.
The commemorative £5 crown, featuring Alice and the Cheshire Cat, is inspired by Sir John Tenniel's original illustrations and is available from today at The Royal Mint.
Part of a two-coin collectors' series, the Through the Looking-Glass £5 crown will be released later this year, to mark 150 years of the same title.
To mark the collaboration with the V&A, the coins were unveiled alongside Sir John Tenniel's original illustrations at the museum's Alice: Curiouser and Curiouser exhibition in London.

The Royal Mint has today unveiled the first official Alice's Adventures in Wonderland coin collection inspired by the much-loved illustrations of the original book.

In collaboration with the Victoria and Albert Museum, the special £5 crown featuring Alice and the Cheshire Cat will be available from today. The coin was revealed alongside the original illustrations by Sir John Tenniel at the Alice: Curiouser and Curiouser exhibition at the world's leading museum of art, design and performance.

Made by the Original Maker of UK coins, the £5 crown provides an ideal canvas to immortalise the iconic illustrations in vivid detail and colour, using traditional minting techniques and innovative design technology. Featuring the edge inscription 'Curiouser and Curiouser', the intricate design is one of the most detailed coins produced by the 1,100-year-old Makers.

Launched in base metal (known as brilliant uncirculated), and also available in gold and silver, the Alice's Adventures in Wonderland keepsake is part of a two-coin collectors' range created by The Royal Mint Designer Ffion Gwillim and Sculptor Emma Noble. The second coin, featuring Tweedledum and Tweedledee, will launch later this summer in celebration of 150 years of Through the Looking-Glass - the sequel to the original Lewis Carroll book.

Much like the popularity of coin collecting, the treasured tales have passed the test of time - currently the second most searched children's book in the UK on Google.

The-Royal-Mint-Celebrates-The-Ever-Popular-Alice's-Adventures-In-Wonderland-On-Official-UK-Coin

Clare Maclennan Divisional Director of Commemorative Coin at The Royal Mint said: "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland is a true classic that has been cherished by generations of adults and children of all ages and is still as popular today. In collaboration with the V&A, we have commemorated this treasured tale for the first time on an official UK coin.

"Inspired by Sir John Tenniel's original illustrations, the beautiful £5 crown has been crafted to the finest quality, combining traditional minting skills with innovation in design technology. I'm sure the Alice's Adventures in Wonderland range will become a popular choice for collectors, capturing the imagination of people of all ages, and to launch at the awe-inspiring Victoria and Albert Museum during the 150th anniversary of Through the Looking-Glass is a fitting celebration."

Amelia Calver, Research and Development Manager, V&A Brand Licensing, commented: "We're delighted to be celebrating the global phenomenon beloved by all ages, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, with the 2021 commemorative coins. The designs masterfully capture the charm of Tenniel's original illustrations and pay homage to some of the Wonderland and Through the Looking-Glass characters that Alice meets along the way. The 2021 coins are set to give fans the chance to add to their existing collections and inspire new readers of the book to discover the magic of Carroll's stories and embark on wondrous journeys of their own."
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Coinfrog's Avatar
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94367 Posts
 Posted 07/12/2021  10:15 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Coinfrog to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
"Twas brillig, and the slithy toves...". Such delightful, wondrous books.
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10284 Posts
 Posted 07/12/2021  10:39 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add TNG to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Is the denomination and country on the edge?
I don't consider it a "coin", more a medal in my opinion.

Off with their heads!

Late edit comment:
Just thought that maybe these are just showing the colourized reverses and not showing the obverse in the website. {or I am missing something here?}
Edited by TNG
07/12/2021 10:44 am
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saxon's Avatar
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 Posted 07/12/2021  12:00 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add saxon to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I never buy the novelty £5 coins for my collection. They are nothing more than useless tokens.
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PaddyB's Avatar
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945 Posts
 Posted 07/12/2021  1:09 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add PaddyB to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I am with you @Saxon. As far as I am concerned discs of metal are not coins unless they are released for circulation, or at least are usable at shops or banks. As the £5 coin is no longer accepted as such, it is a gewgaw, not a coin.
Edited by PaddyB
07/12/2021 1:10 pm
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JohnConduitt's Avatar
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725 Posts
 Posted 07/12/2021  3:00 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add JohnConduitt to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
It's a paradox they're called 'coins' because they are legal tender, in the sense you have to accept them as payment for a debt, but you don't have to accept them otherwise (such as in shops).

While historically, many coins that circulated widely (and were accepted in shops) had to be called tokens because they were not legal tender. James I and Charles I farthings, the George III Bank of England eighteenpence and the Bank of England 3 shillings were all 'official' but not issued by The Royal Mint and so not 'coins'.
Edited by JohnConduitt
07/12/2021 3:05 pm
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