Yes, it's a portrait of Lincoln made of pennies! Shane had the idea back when he was in high school. He completed it a couple of years ago and I loved it then, and I love it now. With President's Day weekend coming up ... and today actually being Lincoln's birthday, it definitely deserves a blog post!
Here are some random facts about the picture from Shane:
- Made from 1,638 pennies (1,612 whole pennies and 52 half pennies).
- Each row has 31 and 1 half pennies.
- There are 52 rows.
- The pennies are staggered (so the second row is offset from the first row so each row “fits” into the neighboring row), resulting in the need to have a half penny on each row.
- There is at least one penny from each year from 1909 to 2009.
- There is one 1943 steel penny (lower right-hand corner).
- The US mint is making 2009 pennies with new designs on the reverse – there are 4 different designs: Birth and Early Childhood in Kentucky (aka “Log Cabin”), Formative Years in Indiana (aka “Rail Splitter”), Professional Life in Illinois, and Presidency in Washington, DC. I wanted to use at least one penny with each reverse design (although all the pennies in the picture only show the front); but only the first two were available when assembling the picture, so I’ll swap out two pennies for the other 2009 designs later.
- I tried to find enough dark pennies, but ended up coloring some pennies (using different methods) to have enough dark and mid-tones.
- The pennies are fastened to a piece of pressed wood (masonite).
- The pennies were fastened primarily using contact cement; although I did experiment with gorilla glue and liquid nails as well.
- The picture is fairly heavy, and so I will craft a special mechanism to hang it (once I get it framed).
Update: It has been hanging in Shane and Alicia's home for a while now ...
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