The "incused" high-relief format revives a technique more associated with Augustus Saint-Gaudens' controversial 1907 American double eagle than with modern bullion programs — the recessed field creates a visual inversion that standard struck coinage avoids precisely because it traps dirt in circulation. That concern is irrelevant here; this piece was never meant to circulate. Perth's execution of deep incused relief at this diameter requires exceptionally slow, high-tonnage pressing, typically multiple strikes, and rejection rates that make even modest mintages difficult to achieve consistently.
The "incused" high-relief format revives a technique more associated with Augustus Saint-Gaudens' controversial 1907 American double eagle than with modern bullion programs — the recessed field creates a visual inversion that standard struck coinage avoids precisely because it traps dirt in circulation. That concern is irrelevant here; this piece was never meant to circulate. Perth's execution of deep incused relief at this diameter requires exceptionally slow, high-tonnage pressing, typically multiple strikes, and rejection rates that make even modest mintages difficult to achieve consistently.