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Lighting the way with glowing hearts—and coins

  • Dec 05, 2018
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  • 3 minutes read

Some things never lose their cool factor. Ever since the first consumer glow sticks were waved in the air at a Grateful Dead show in 1971, glow-in-the-dark technology has never lost its... well, shine. The Royal Canadian Mint has been a pioneer in bringing glow-in-the-dark effects to a wide range of coins, most recently with the 2018 $5 pure silver Hearts Aglow  tribute to Canada’s multicultural makeup.

The Mint’s journey into the (glowing) dark started in 2012, recalls product manager Erica Maga.

“We’d been approached by a supplier who was interested in exploring applications for photoluminescent [glow-in-the-dark] coatings,” Maga says, “and we were right at that time working on a series of four 25-cent pieces featuring prehistoric creatures. We thought, ‘Kids like dinosaurs and things that glow in the dark. How fun is that?’ So we decided to use photoluminescence to light up the creatures’ skeletons.”

Maga’s colleague, Mélanie Luis, says attempting glow-in-the-dark coins was a bit of a gamble, but adds, “The Mint isn’t shy about trying out new technologies.”

In that case, the gamble paid off, with the entire prehistoric creatures series proving enormously popular.

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Some things never lose their cool factor. Ever since the first consumer glow sticks were waved in the air at a Grateful Dead show in 1971, glow-in-the-dark technology has never lost its... well, shine. The Royal Canadian Mint has been a pioneer in bringing glow-in-the-dark effects to a wide range of coins, most recently with the 2018 $5 pure silver Hearts Aglow  tribute to Canada’s multicultural makeup.

The Mint’s journey into the (glowing) dark started in 2012, recalls product manager Erica Maga.

“We’d been approached by a supplier who was interested in exploring applications for photoluminescent [glow-in-the-dark] coatings,” Maga says, “and we were right at that time working on a series of four 25-cent pieces featuring prehistoric creatures. We thought, ‘Kids like dinosaurs and things that glow in the dark. How fun is that?’ So we decided to use photoluminescence to light up the creatures’ skeletons.”

Maga’s colleague, Mélanie Luis, says attempting glow-in-the-dark coins was a bit of a gamble, but adds, “The Mint isn’t shy about trying out new technologies.”

In that case, the gamble paid off, with the entire prehistoric creatures series proving enormously popular.