The Antique Carousel belongs to a Royal Canadian Mint series celebrating the mechanical fairground rides that peaked in North American popularity between roughly 1880 and 1930, largely built by a handful of competing firms — Dentzel, Looff, Parker, and the Herschell-Spillman Company among them. By the postwar period, fiberglass replacements and stricter safety codes had retired most original carved-wood machines to museums or private collectors.
The selective gold plating over fine silver at this diameter and weight pushes the technical execution hard — the RCM developed its selective plating process across several large-format issues in the 2010s, with registration tolerances tightened significantly after early series showed misalignment under magnification.
The Antique Carousel belongs to a Royal Canadian Mint series celebrating the mechanical fairground rides that peaked in North American popularity between roughly 1880 and 1930, largely built by a handful of competing firms — Dentzel, Looff, Parker, and the Herschell-Spillman Company among them. By the postwar period, fiberglass replacements and stricter safety codes had retired most original carved-wood machines to museums or private collectors.
The selective gold plating over fine silver at this diameter and weight pushes the technical execution hard — the RCM developed its selective plating process across several large-format issues in the 2010s, with registration tolerances tightened significantly after early series showed misalignment under magnification.