![]() ![]()
|
Presentation
What we do
Vision and mission Environmental and quality management Annual reports Company Management The history of Mint of Finland The Mint of Finland as an employer Contact us Corporate Governance Corporate Governance Statement Statute The Board of Directors' Rules of Procedure Mint of Finland Ltd.'s Ethical Guidelines Our services Media relations For distributors For companies For collectors Promotional material News archive Product images Portraits Other photographs Brochures Videos
Collector coin for the Finnish Year of Design
Inspiration a defining moment for a designer
This year, during Helsinki’s tenure as the World Design Capital, international attention will focus on Finnish design. Mint of Finland and the Ministry of Finance are planning to issue a collector coin in honour of the year of design. A piece by designer Henna Lamberg, depicting inspiration ‒ the motivator of all creative work – has been chosen as the coin's theme. Finnish design is experiencing a boom around the world, and in recognition of this, the International Council of Societies of Industrial Design elected Helsinki as the World Design Capital for 2012. The design coin will allow Finland to have an international souvenir that expresses what our country is like today. When a product looks and feels good, it is well designed. ‘The design of the coin to be introduced follows Scandinavian principles: it is clear-cut and focused. The collector coin will, however, also be an expression of our times, as its lines and various alternating surfaces make it modern’, says Henna Karjalainen, Communications Director of Mint of Finland. In search of inspiration Inspiration is the force behind creativity. The collector coin for the jubilee year has been designed by industrial designer Henna Lamberg, who explains that she did not want to let the audience off easy. ‘The coin will safekeep my inspiration, in the way I experienced it. Inspiration is the moment when I know what I intend to do, and the plans for a design become clear. I hope the coin will inspire ideas and make people think of its story’, says Lamberg. The collector coin for Finnish creativity will be minted with a nominal value of €50, and its materials will be gold and silver. A base-metal version of the coin, with a nominal value of €5, will also be minted. The Collector Coin Committee established by the Ministry of Finance selected the theme of the collector coin amongst competition entries. Senior Budget Secretary Marja Kirppu from the Ministry of Finance acted as the chairman of the Collector Coin Committee. Other members of the Committee included Paul Gustafsson, CEO of Mint of Finland, Maria Lähteenmäki, Docent at the University of Helsinki, Heikki Malme, Chief Curator at Ateneum, Iiro A. Ahokas, representing the Finnish Association of Designers Ornamo, Niels Haukeland, representing the Association of Finnish Sculptors, Kai van der Puij representing the Finnish Association of Architects, and PekkaTimonen, representing the World Design Capital Helsinki 2012 programme. Further information:
Yrjö Sotamaa
Henna Karjalainen Mint of Finland Ltd. is the leading mint in the Eurozone. It is the sole owner of the German coin-blank manufacturer, Saxonia EuroCoin GmbH, and holds a 50 percent share in the Norwegian Det Norske Myntverket. Mint of Finland is dedicated to designing, marketing and minting coins. The company is owned by the Finnish state. Mint of Finland produces metallic currency, commemorative and collector coins, as well as coin sets. In 2012, Mint of Finland will issue six new collector coins and two commemorative coins. To see how coins are produced, visit the 'About a Coin' exhibition at Heureka, the Finnish Science Centre. For further information about events in 2012, please visit: www.mint.fi.
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]()
|
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]()
|