Littleton Coin Company

Behind the scenes look at Colorized Coins

Colorized Coins - Littleton Coin Blog

Since 2004, Littleton has been creating our own unique colorized coins.

Recently a customer asked about how we colorized our coins, so I thought I’d tell you more about the process in this week’s post. Interest in colorized coins reflects an evolving hobby and collector. While traditionalists prefer date and mint mark collecting, non-traditionalists like the beauty and historical representations colorized coins bring to the hobby. And, many people enjoy collecting both!

Littleton Coin produced its first colorized coin in about 2004 and since then, Testimonial - Littleton Coin Blogwe’ve created hundreds of custom designs. When we first started, we tested the waters by selling colorized coins made by other companies and soon began to enhance our own coins. To our delight, their popularity soared with our collectors.

The appeal is in the color that brings original design details to life

Designer, Chantel - Littleton Coin Blog

Senior Designer, Chantel, works on creating some of Littleton’s exclusive colorized coins.

I spoke to Chantel, one of our senior designers, who created some of our earliest coins. The Pope John Paul II medal was one of the first, and it already had a design we could follow. Back then, when a coin or medal had a design we were going to colorize, a simple template was supplied and Chantel used it to enhance the details with color. She colorized many of our Statehood quarters, but her favorites were the WWII colorized Silver American Eagles. “That project was more challenging because we didn’t just use the art already on the coin. I had to choose images then design and colorize the whole piece. But that’s also what made it fun.”

Small is beautiful

Civil War Series - Littleton Coin Blog

There are 9 unique designs in this colorized Civil War set.

When we colorize coins, we use popular design programs such as Illustrator and Photoshop to apply the color to the template. But when we create our own illustration for a coin, like the Civil War series, we search and obtain historical images that best fit the theme we’d like to convey. Then we work with the images and apply or enhance them with color, all the while keeping in mind that the design is going to be used on something very small – only 19 mm to 30.6 mm in diameter – this can be challenging! Once the colorized design is approved, we send our colorized images off to a company that applies the special inks directly to the surface of the coins. A sample is sent back to the designer, who inspects it to make sure the colors are right and the quality meets our standards.

Michele, also a senior designer, colorizes coins too. She said, “Now over a decade later, we’re supplied with a very intricate template that perhaps echoes the way coin designs are digitized today. The designs have many nuances and that makes it challenging.”

The future of colorized coins!

When Michele works on a series, like the Native American dollars, she tries to use the same color tones and style to make the individual coins feel like part of a larger set. Like Chantel, she likes working with a set of coins using images she has selected and colorizing them, but said the real challenge is making the design fit on a coin,

Legends Set - Littleton Coin Blog

The Wild West Legends Set is a collector favorite because it goes with Morgan dollars, Buffalo nickels or many other classic coins.

especially one the size of a Lincoln cent. About 3 years ago, beginning with America’s Greatest Landmark series, Littleton started using a special finish on colorized coins called domed technology which Michele especially likes, because it makes the colors pop! Her favorite set is the Wild West Legends set.

No matter your collecting interests, I think colorized coins with their historic images, rich colors and details add interest to a collection.

Comments
  1. Richard Spencer | Reply
    • LCC Writing Team | Reply
  2. AM | Reply
    • LCC Writing Team | Reply

Leave a Reply