Issued under Belarus's long-running commemorative silver program, this piece uses pad-printing — an industrial transfer technique borrowed from consumer product manufacturing — to apply polychrome enamel-like color directly onto the coin surface. The National Bank of Belarus adopted the method extensively in the 2000s and 2010s, producing dozens of thematic issues that would otherwise require cloisonné or vitreous enamel at far greater cost. Pad-printed elements are not considered an alteration in this series; they leave the mint as finished product.
Issued under Belarus's long-running commemorative silver program, this piece uses pad-printing — an industrial transfer technique borrowed from consumer product manufacturing — to apply polychrome enamel-like color directly onto the coin surface. The National Bank of Belarus adopted the method extensively in the 2000s and 2010s, producing dozens of thematic issues that would otherwise require cloisonné or vitreous enamel at far greater cost. Pad-printed elements are not considered an alteration in this series; they leave the mint as finished product.