Who she is
Most coin designers spend years inside the U.S. Mint. Cassie McFarland was a working graphic artist in San Luis Obispo, California, who entered a public contest — and beat everyone.
In 2013 the Mint ran an open competition for the face of the 2014 National Baseball Hall of Fame coins. It drew 178 entries. McFarland submitted hers on the final day. "I don't know why, but for some reason even though I only had one day to finish, I was very motivated to get it done," she later said.
Her entry was a single image: an open, well-worn baseball glove. She titled it A Hand Full of Gold. The Treasury picked it from sixteen finalists, with a judging panel that included Hall of Fame players Joe Morgan, Brooks Robinson, Ozzie Smith, Don Sutton, and Dave Winfield. She was paid $5,000, and her initials were placed on the coin.
Born in 1985, McFarland earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Studio Art and Design from California Polytechnic State University in San Luis Obispo in 2008. She is, by training and trade, a graphic artist and painter — not a career engraver. The Baseball Hall of Fame coins are her one famous foray into money.