Issued as part of the Royal Canadian Mint's twelve-coin Millennium Series, each month of 2000 received its own reverse design selected through a national competition that drew thousands of submissions from ordinary Canadians. The colored variant was applied after striking using a dry-printing process the Mint had only recently adopted for circulation-quality coins — an unusual move for a denomination intended to spend time in pockets.
The series sold out rapidly as a collector set, meaning most colored examples never circulated at all.
Issued as part of the Royal Canadian Mint's twelve-coin Millennium Series, each month of 2000 received its own reverse design selected through a national competition that drew thousands of submissions from ordinary Canadians. The colored variant was applied after striking using a dry-printing process the Mint had only recently adopted for circulation-quality coins — an unusual move for a denomination intended to spend time in pockets.
The series sold out rapidly as a collector set, meaning most colored examples never circulated at all.