Designer

Emily Damstra

The science illustrator who drew the modern Silver Eagle — and three of the U.S. Mint's most moving commemoratives.

In 2021 the U.S. Mint changed the back of its most famous coin for the first time in 35 years. The new eagle gliding home to its nest was drawn by Emily Damstra — a freelance science illustrator from the Great Lakes who had quietly become one of the Mint's most-credited living designers.

Who she is

Emily Damstra did not set out to design money. Since 2000 she has worked as a freelance science illustrator — the artist who draws the beetle, the fossil, the plant cell with enough precision that a textbook can trust it. She studied drawing and illustration at Alma College in Michigan, then earned a Master of Fine Arts in science illustration from the University of Michigan. Hundreds of natural-history subjects came before her first coin.

Coins arrived through a side door. A dual citizen of the United States and Canada, Damstra began designing for the Royal Canadian Mint in 2010, then joined the U.S. Mint's Artistic Infusion Program — its roster of outside artists — in 2014. The crossover suited her: a coin is a tiny, exacting canvas, much like an illustration that has to read clearly at the size of a fingernail. Over the next decade she produced more than forty coin and medal designs across both mints, working from her studio in Guelph, Ontario.

That blend — a naturalist's eye for clean line and a storyteller's instinct for a single, legible image — is why her commemoratives tend to land emotionally. She is not carving the coins herself; in U.S. Mint practice the designer draws the image and a staff sculptor-engraver turns it into the relief that gets struck. Damstra is the one who decides what the coin should say.

The craft

Her best-known commercial work is the back of the American Silver Eagle. From 1986 the reverse — the tails side — carried John Mercanti's heraldic eagle, unchanged for a generation. In 2021, with the design no longer protected, the Mint went looking for a new one. Damstra's answer was an eagle coming in to land, carrying an oak branch to its nest — a quieter, more living bird than the stiff coat-of-arms it replaced. Collectors call it the "Type 2" reverse, and it now appears on one of the most widely held silver coins on earth.

Her commemoratives show the same approach: find the one human image that carries the whole story. For Boys Town's centennial she drew a lonely girl gazing up into an oak tree on the front, then the same child sheltered by that tree with a family on the back — the empty space around her on the obverse deliberately doing the emotional work. For the Breast Cancer Awareness program she put two women together, one older and relieved, one younger with a raised fist, a butterfly of hope above them. For the Christa McAuliffe dollar she chose to show the teacher-astronaut doing the thing she was proudest of — teaching — pointing her students toward the sky.

Damstra has talked openly about how she works toward that single gesture. Of the Maya Angelou quarter she designed, she explained that she settled on showing the writer "in an uplifting stance, gesturing expressively," with a bird in flight and a rising sun — images Angelou used in her own writing. It is the method behind all of it: read the subject deeply, then trust one clear picture to say it.

Key facts

Full name
Emily S. Damstra
Nationality
Dual citizen, United States and Canada
Based in
Guelph, Ontario
Training
Alma College (drawing & illustration); MFA in science illustration, University of Michigan
Day job
Freelance science illustrator since 2000
Mint roles
Royal Canadian Mint (since 2010); U.S. Mint Artistic Infusion Program (since 2014)
Output
40+ coin and medal designs across both mints
Best known for
American Silver Eagle 'Type 2' reverse (2021–present)
Notable award
2019 Coin of the Year — Most Inspirational Coin (Boys Town Centennial Silver Dollar)

Career milestones

  1. 2000Begins working as a freelance science illustrator.
  2. 2010Starts designing coins for the Royal Canadian Mint.
  3. 2014Joins the U.S. Mint's Artistic Infusion Program.
  4. 2017Boys Town Centennial Silver Dollar released — she designed both sides.
  5. 2018Wins the Breast Cancer Awareness coin design competition; her designs appear on the gold, silver, and clad coins, including the first U.S. 'pink gold' coin.
  6. 2019Boys Town dollar named Most Inspirational Coin at the Coin of the Year Awards, Berlin.
  7. 2021Her new 'Type 2' eagle reverse debuts on the American Silver Eagle; designs the Christa McAuliffe silver dollar reverse.
  8. 2022Designs the Maya Angelou quarter reverse for the American Women Quarters Program.

Questions collectors ask

Who designed the new Silver Eagle reverse?

Emily Damstra. Her eagle-coming-in-to-land design replaced John Mercanti's heraldic eagle in 2021 and is known to collectors as the 'Type 2' reverse. It now appears on every American Silver Eagle struck since.

Did Emily Damstra design the Boys Town silver dollar?

Yes — both sides. She designed the obverse (a lonely girl looking up into an oak tree) and the reverse (the same child sheltered by that tree with a family). U.S. Mint sculptor-engraver Joseph Menna turned her drawings into the struck relief. The coin won Most Inspirational Coin at the 2019 Coin of the Year Awards.

Which part of the Christa McAuliffe dollar did she design?

The reverse, showing McAuliffe teaching and pointing her students toward the sky. The obverse portrait was designed by Laurie Musser. Damstra's reverse was sculpted by Joseph Menna.

What did she do on the 2018 Breast Cancer Awareness coins?

She won the design competition and designed both the obverse and reverse, which appear on all three coins in the program — the $5 gold, the silver dollar, and the clad half dollar. The gold piece was the first U.S. coin struck in a pink-hued 'rose gold' alloy.

Is Emily Damstra a U.S. Mint engraver?

No — she is a designer in the Mint's Artistic Infusion Program, the roster of outside artists who supply designs. The Mint's own staff sculptor-engravers (such as Joseph Menna, Phebe Hemphill, or Renata Gordon) convert her drawings into the three-dimensional models that are struck into coins.

Sources