The St. Catharines Standard of Ontario, Canada has an article about a recent public meet-and-greet for the designer of one of Canada's new 2017 sesquicentennnial dollar
coins. -Editor
Neither rain, nor sleet, nor snow can keep coin collectors away from the post office, it seems, not when there is a chance to meet the creator of a new loonie.
Hundreds of collectors, young and old, patiently waited in the rain outside of the Queen Street Canada Post office Thursday for the chance to shake hands with local artist Wesley Klassen, whose
artwork is the new face of Canada’s dollar coin.
“It’s a celebration of Canada,” said St. Catharines coin collector Ben Corfield, taking shelter under the post office’s awning. He has been collecting coins since he was a boy, he said and wasn’t
going to miss the chance at meeting someone who designed the face of a loonie.
“It’s just a great thing to me to see so many people excited about the good things Canada does.”
Post office staff told The Standard people began lining up two hours before the doors opened.
Coin collectors and the curious arrived at a steady pace, keeping the line long enough to reach the intersection with St. Paul Street most of the day. Those who didn’t have the new loonie could
exchange as many as three of their old coins for a new one.
Inside, Klassen was all smiles. The St. Catharines artist, an electrician with Ontario Power Generation, was at the post office as part of a promotional event to highlight the coin produced for
Canada’s 150th anniversary.
He said he was overwhelmed by the long line of people waiting to see him.
“I did two of these the other day at post offices in Hamilton, and I got the first taste of this. A lot of people showing up and expressing their appreciation. It is a little unexpected, but I am
very appreciative,” said Klassen.
Klassen’s design, which features a train, fishing boats, a lighthouse and Peggy’s Cove, Chateau Frontenac, the CN Tower, Prairie grain elevators and Lions’ Gate Bridge in B.C., was chosen for the
loonie after a national contest that saw more than 10,000 Canadians submit entries.
He said he was trying to tell the story of Canadian achievement in a single image. It started with the train to represent the rail line that connects the nation coast-to-coast and evolved from
there.
“One of the special things about it for me is that all of the places featured on the coin are places my parents took me to as a child,” Klassen said.
Klassen has no formal art training but learned the craft of pictorial storytelling from his father John Klassen, a successful amateur artist in his own right who designed the original coat of arms
for the Town of Niagara-on-the-Lake.
To read the complete article, see:
Hundreds brave rain to meet coin artist
(http://www.stcatharinesstandard.ca/2017/07/13/hundreds-brave-rain-to-meet-coin-artist)
We discussed Klassen back in 2015 when we was just one of 25 finalists for the design. Here's what the coin looks like. Cramming so many elements into one tiny coin surface is
generally a recipe for disaster, but his design manages the feat quite well - I think it's an attractive and interesting coin. -Editor
To read the earlier E-Sylum articles, see:
ARTIST WESLEY KLASSEN SUBMITS DESIGNS FOR CANADIAN COINS (http://www.coinbooks.org/esylum_v18n36a33.html)
CANADA'S SESQUICENTENNIAL CIRCULATING COINS (http://www.coinbooks.org/esylum_v19n45a20.html)
THE BOOK BAZARRE
GOLD: Everything You Need to Know to Buy and Sell Today. The new second edition of the best seller by Jeff Garrett and Q. David Bowers is a collectible in itself, with its library-quality
slipcase, beautiful full-color images, and pullout charts and cards. Order your copy for $12.95 at Whitman.com , or call 1-800-546-2995.
Wayne Homren, Editor
The Numismatic Bibliomania Society is a non-profit organization
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