Catálogo
| Emissor | Eurozone |
|---|---|
| Ano | |
| Tipo | Coin pattern |
| Valor | 2 Cents |
| Moeda | Euro (2002-date) |
| Composição | Copper plated steel |
| Peso | 3.06 g |
| Diâmetro | 18.75 mm |
| Espessura | 1.67 mm |
| Formato | Round |
| Técnica | Milled |
| Orientação | Variable alignment ↺ |
| Gravador(es) | |
| Em circulação até | |
| Referência(s) |
| Descrição do anverso | Blank. |
|---|---|
| Escrita do anverso | |
| Legenda do anverso | |
| Descrição do reverso | Blank. |
| Escrita do reverso | |
| Legenda do reverso | |
| Bordo | Smooth with a groove running circumferentially around the edge |
| Casa da moeda | |
| Tiragem |
ND - - |
| ID Numisquare | 5423402200 |
| Informações adicionais |
Historical Context: This blank planchet for a 2 Euro Cents coin originates from the modern Eurozone era, marked by monetary union and physical currency introduction in 2002. This unadorned copper-plated steel disc represents the foundational material destined for legal tender. It serves as the pristine canvas upon which the unified European reverse and a national obverse design would be impressed, symbolizing the initial, common stage before the expression of diverse national identities.
Artistry: Lacking impressed design, this planchet has no engraver or traditional stylistic school. Its "artistry" is paradoxical, embodying pure design potential. It is the perfect, unblemished tabula rasa, awaiting the transformative strike that would imbue it with symbolic and aesthetic value. Its beauty lies in uniform circularity and smooth surface, a testament to industrial precision, ready for the intricate details of the Euro's common face and national emblem.
Technical/Grading: As an unstruck planchet, traditional "high-points" or "strike qualities" are inapplicable. Technical assessment focuses on manufacturing integrity: precise adherence to the 18.75 mm diameter and 3.06 g weight, and the quality of its copper-plated steel composition. Grading evaluates the planchet's surface for imperfections like laminations, cracks, or foreign matter, which would compromise the subsequent strike. An ideal specimen exhibits a perfectly smooth, uniform surface, indicative of optimal preparation.