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Buy a Lot of 100 officially licensed Coca-Cola® Silver Rounds — 100 troy oz of .999 fine silver, 9Fine Mint (ISO 9001), reverse proof finish, 5 sealed tubes of 20.
| Quantity | Cash/Check | Credit Card | Paypal/Pay |
|---|---|---|---|
| Any Quantity | $7,135.00 | $7,434.67 | $7,527.42 |
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The Lot of 100 — 1 oz Coca-Cola® Silver Round delivers one hundred individual 1-ounce .999 fine silver rounds — packaged in 5 Coca-Cola-branded sealed tubes of 20 rounds each — representing a combined 100 troy ounces of .999 fine silver.
Each round in this lot is produced by 9Fine Mint (headquartered in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma), the ISO 9001 certified American private mint officially licensed by The Coca-Cola Company to produce silver and gold products bearing Coca-Cola's trademarks. Every round carries the inscription "©THE COCA-COLA COMPANY" on the reverse — the official copyright mark that confirms this product's authentic, authorized status.
Why buy the Lot of 100? The lot format offers meaningful per-unit savings compared to individual round pricing. For silver investors accumulating position, collectors completing a personal inventory, dealers stocking supply, or corporate buyers sourcing Coca-Cola-themed gifts in quantity, the Lot of 100 is the most cost-effective entry point to this product.
The obverse features the world's most recognised logo — the Coca-Cola® script wordmark in its classic presentation. Above the logo, the word "ENJOY" appears — referencing the brand's long-running "Enjoy Coca-Cola" tagline that has anchored its advertising identity globally.
This script — characterised by flowing Spencerian letterforms — was originally created by Frank M. Robinson, John Pemberton's bookkeeper, who invented both the name "Coca-Cola" and its visual identity in 1886. Robinson reportedly chose the double-C because he believed "the two Cs would look well in advertising." The logo was registered as a U.S. federal trademark in 1905 and has remained one of the world's most continuously used commercial trademarks for over 120 years.
The reverse depicts the silhouette of three iconic Coca-Cola contour glass bottles — the hourglass-shaped vessel that has been the brand's primary container for over a century, celebrated in art, culture, and advertising as one of the most recognisable product designs ever created.
The story of the contour bottle: On April 26, 1915, the Trustees of the Coca-Cola Bottling Association issued a design challenge to American glass manufacturers: create a bottle "so distinct that you would recognize it by feel in the dark or lying broken on the ground." The winning design came from the Root Glass Company of Terre Haute, Indiana, where a team including mold-shop supervisor Earl R. Dean and shop foreman Alexander Samuelson drew inspiration from a library illustration of a cocoa bean pod. Dean sketched the distinctive ribbed, hourglass shape, and the prototype was refined into a patented design filed on November 16, 1915, under Samuelson's name.
The contour bottle has inspired artists for a century. Most significantly, Andy Warhol incorporated the Coca-Cola bottle into his Pop Art practice in the early 1960s, producing a series of paintings that are now among the most recognised works in American art history. His "Green Coca-Cola Bottles" (1962) — a 112-bottle grid composition now at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York — used factory-like repetition to comment on American mass production and consumer culture. A smaller work from the same period, "Coca-Cola (3)" (also called "3 Coke Bottles"), featured three bottles in a composition directly echoed by this round's reverse design. Warhol famously wrote: "What's great about this country is that America started the tradition where the richest consumers buy essentially the same things as the poorest... You can be watching TV and see Coca-Cola, and you know that the president drinks Coke, Liz Taylor drinks Coke, and just think, you can drink Coke, too."
The three-bottle composition carries the essential identifying inscriptions: "1 OZ .999 FINE SILVER" — confirming weight and purity — and "©THE COCA-COLA COMPANY," the official licensing mark confirming authorized production.
Each round in this lot is struck to a reverse proof finish — a premium surface treatment in which the design elements (the bottle silhouettes) carry a frosted, matte texture while the background fields have a mirror-like, polished surface. This is the inverse of a standard proof coin — where design elements are frosted and fields are mirror — and creates a distinctive visual effect where the bottles appear to emerge from a brilliant, reflective background.
The reverse proof finish elevates these rounds above standard bullion and positions them firmly in the collectible category, where the combination of brand recognition, official licensing, and premium surface treatment supports sustained collector and gift-buyer demand.
Each round measures 39mm in diameter, 2.8mm in thickness, and weighs exactly 1 troy oz (31.1g).
9Fine Mint is the private American mint officially licensed by The Coca-Cola Company to produce silver and gold products bearing Coca-Cola trademarks. Headquartered in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, 9Fine Mint produces all its products in the United States.
ISO 9001 certification ensures consistent manufacturing processes and quality management across every product the mint produces. Official licensing from The Coca-Cola Company means every round carries full trademark authorization — this is not a third-party tribute or reproduction, but a formally authenticated precious metals product. All 9Fine Mint products meet IRS fineness requirements for Precious Metals IRA inclusion, and the full product range spans 1 oz, 5 oz, and 10 oz silver rounds and bars bearing Coca-Cola trademarks, as well as other pop culture and American heritage designs.
The ISO 9001 certification and official licensing are the two most important credentials for buyers of branded silver products. The certification ensures manufacturing consistency; the licensing ensures every product is authenticated by the brand it depicts.
Coca-Cola was invented on May 8, 1886, by Dr. John Stith Pemberton, a local pharmacist at Jacob's Pharmacy in Atlanta, Georgia. Pemberton created a carbonated syrup originally sold as a "tonic for common ailments" — a soda fountain drink priced at five cents per glass. Early sales were modest: approximately 9 gallons of syrup sold in the first year.
The name "Coca-Cola" and the original script logo were created by Pemberton's bookkeeper, Frank M. Robinson, who believed the double-C alliteration would be effective in advertising. Robinson wrote the name in his own Spencerian script, establishing the visual identity of what would become the world's most recognised brand.
The Coca-Cola Company was incorporated in 1892. In 1899, the company signed its first bottling agreement — creating the franchised distribution model that still characterises the soft drink industry. By 1900, syrup plants had been established in Dallas, Los Angeles, and Philadelphia.
In 1919, a group of investors led by Ernest Woodruff purchased the company for $25 million. His son, Robert Winship Woodruff, guided the company as president and chairman from 1923 to 1955 — the era of Coca-Cola's truly global expansion.
Coca-Cola has consistently been recognised as one of the most innovative and culturally influential advertisers in history. Several campaigns have achieved permanent status in the cultural record.
In 1929, "The pause that refreshes" became one of the first slogans to position a product around an emotional and physical experience rather than its ingredients. In 1931, illustrator Haddon Sundblom's paintings of Santa Claus drinking Coke standardised the modern image of a red-suited Santa across Western culture — an association so pervasive it is now inseparable from the holiday. In 1971, the "Hilltop" commercial — filmed in Italy with singers from around the world performing "I'd Like to Buy the World a Coke" — is widely considered one of the greatest television commercials ever made, positioning Coca-Cola as a symbol of cross-cultural unity. Furthermore, New Coke (1985) — the controversial formula change that lasted 79 days before reverting to Coca-Cola Classic — is now studied in business schools worldwide as one of the defining case studies in brand loyalty and consumer identity.
At 100 troy ounces of .999 fine silver, this lot represents a substantial silver position. The branded, officially licensed nature of the product — combined with 9Fine Mint's ISO certification — supports both investment-grade quality and collectible premium. The lot is IRA eligible, making it suitable for retirement account silver accumulation. Melt value calculation: current silver spot price multiplied by 100 troy oz.
Dealers acquire Lots of 100 to build inventory of one of the more distinctive privately minted silver products on the market. The Coca-Cola brand's global recognition means buyer awareness is effectively pre-built — no explanation required at the point of sale.
One hundred individually packaged Coca-Cola silver rounds, pre-organised in 5 sealed tubes of 20, is an unusual and memorable corporate gift option. The combination of The Coca-Cola Company's iconic brand with investment-grade silver is immediately understood as meaningful — a gift that will be kept rather than consumed.
The Coca-Cola memorabilia and collectibles market is one of the largest brand-specific collecting categories in the world, with an estimated collector base in the millions. Official Coca-Cola silver rounds — bearing formal trademark authorization — represent a premium tier of Coca-Cola collectibles that bridges the memorabilia and precious metals markets in a way no standard piece of branded merchandise can.
BOLD Precious Metals is an authorized dealer of 9Fine Mint products, affiliated with PCGS, NGC, and BBB-accredited with a 99.8%+ positive feedback rating. We carry the complete Coca-Cola silver collection from 9Fine Mint — 1 oz rounds, 1 oz bars, 5 oz bars, and 10 oz bars — in individual, tube, and lot formats.
This lot ships as 5 sealed Coca-Cola-branded tubes of 20. Free, fully insured domestic shipping on all orders of $199 or more.
📧 support@boldpreciousmetals.com
📞 1(866) 454-BOLD
The Lot of 100 — 1 oz Coca-Cola® Silver Round delivers one hundred individual 1-ounce .999 fine silver rounds — packaged in 5 Coca-Cola-branded sealed tubes of 20 rounds each — representing a combined 100 troy ounces of .999 fine silver.
Each round in this lot is produced by 9Fine Mint (headquartered in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma), the ISO 9001 certified American private mint officially licensed by The Coca-Cola Company to produce silver and gold products bearing Coca-Cola's trademarks. Every round carries the inscription "©THE COCA-COLA COMPANY" on the reverse — the official copyright mark that confirms this product's authentic, authorized status.
Why buy the Lot of 100? The lot format offers meaningful per-unit savings compared to individual round pricing. For silver investors accumulating position, collectors completing a personal inventory, dealers stocking supply, or corporate buyers sourcing Coca-Cola-themed gifts in quantity, the Lot of 100 is the most cost-effective entry point to this product.
The obverse features the world's most recognised logo — the Coca-Cola® script wordmark in its classic presentation. Above the logo, the word "ENJOY" appears — referencing the brand's long-running "Enjoy Coca-Cola" tagline that has anchored its advertising identity globally.
This script — characterised by flowing Spencerian letterforms — was originally created by Frank M. Robinson, John Pemberton's bookkeeper, who invented both the name "Coca-Cola" and its visual identity in 1886. Robinson reportedly chose the double-C because he believed "the two Cs would look well in advertising." The logo was registered as a U.S. federal trademark in 1905 and has remained one of the world's most continuously used commercial trademarks for over 120 years.
The reverse depicts the silhouette of three iconic Coca-Cola contour glass bottles — the hourglass-shaped vessel that has been the brand's primary container for over a century, celebrated in art, culture, and advertising as one of the most recognisable product designs ever created.
The story of the contour bottle: On April 26, 1915, the Trustees of the Coca-Cola Bottling Association issued a design challenge to American glass manufacturers: create a bottle "so distinct that you would recognize it by feel in the dark or lying broken on the ground." The winning design came from the Root Glass Company of Terre Haute, Indiana, where a team including mold-shop supervisor Earl R. Dean and shop foreman Alexander Samuelson drew inspiration from a library illustration of a cocoa bean pod. Dean sketched the distinctive ribbed, hourglass shape, and the prototype was refined into a patented design filed on November 16, 1915, under Samuelson's name.
The contour bottle has inspired artists for a century. Most significantly, Andy Warhol incorporated the Coca-Cola bottle into his Pop Art practice in the early 1960s, producing a series of paintings that are now among the most recognised works in American art history. His "Green Coca-Cola Bottles" (1962) — a 112-bottle grid composition now at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York — used factory-like repetition to comment on American mass production and consumer culture. A smaller work from the same period, "Coca-Cola (3)" (also called "3 Coke Bottles"), featured three bottles in a composition directly echoed by this round's reverse design. Warhol famously wrote: "What's great about this country is that America started the tradition where the richest consumers buy essentially the same things as the poorest... You can be watching TV and see Coca-Cola, and you know that the president drinks Coke, Liz Taylor drinks Coke, and just think, you can drink Coke, too."
The three-bottle composition carries the essential identifying inscriptions: "1 OZ .999 FINE SILVER" — confirming weight and purity — and "©THE COCA-COLA COMPANY," the official licensing mark confirming authorized production.
Each round in this lot is struck to a reverse proof finish — a premium surface treatment in which the design elements (the bottle silhouettes) carry a frosted, matte texture while the background fields have a mirror-like, polished surface. This is the inverse of a standard proof coin — where design elements are frosted and fields are mirror — and creates a distinctive visual effect where the bottles appear to emerge from a brilliant, reflective background.
The reverse proof finish elevates these rounds above standard bullion and positions them firmly in the collectible category, where the combination of brand recognition, official licensing, and premium surface treatment supports sustained collector and gift-buyer demand.
Each round measures 39mm in diameter, 2.8mm in thickness, and weighs exactly 1 troy oz (31.1g).
9Fine Mint is the private American mint officially licensed by The Coca-Cola Company to produce silver and gold products bearing Coca-Cola trademarks. Headquartered in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, 9Fine Mint produces all its products in the United States.
ISO 9001 certification ensures consistent manufacturing processes and quality management across every product the mint produces. Official licensing from The Coca-Cola Company means every round carries full trademark authorization — this is not a third-party tribute or reproduction, but a formally authenticated precious metals product. All 9Fine Mint products meet IRS fineness requirements for Precious Metals IRA inclusion, and the full product range spans 1 oz, 5 oz, and 10 oz silver rounds and bars bearing Coca-Cola trademarks, as well as other pop culture and American heritage designs.
The ISO 9001 certification and official licensing are the two most important credentials for buyers of branded silver products. The certification ensures manufacturing consistency; the licensing ensures every product is authenticated by the brand it depicts.
Coca-Cola was invented on May 8, 1886, by Dr. John Stith Pemberton, a local pharmacist at Jacob's Pharmacy in Atlanta, Georgia. Pemberton created a carbonated syrup originally sold as a "tonic for common ailments" — a soda fountain drink priced at five cents per glass. Early sales were modest: approximately 9 gallons of syrup sold in the first year.
The name "Coca-Cola" and the original script logo were created by Pemberton's bookkeeper, Frank M. Robinson, who believed the double-C alliteration would be effective in advertising. Robinson wrote the name in his own Spencerian script, establishing the visual identity of what would become the world's most recognised brand.
The Coca-Cola Company was incorporated in 1892. In 1899, the company signed its first bottling agreement — creating the franchised distribution model that still characterises the soft drink industry. By 1900, syrup plants had been established in Dallas, Los Angeles, and Philadelphia.
In 1919, a group of investors led by Ernest Woodruff purchased the company for $25 million. His son, Robert Winship Woodruff, guided the company as president and chairman from 1923 to 1955 — the era of Coca-Cola's truly global expansion.
Coca-Cola has consistently been recognised as one of the most innovative and culturally influential advertisers in history. Several campaigns have achieved permanent status in the cultural record.
In 1929, "The pause that refreshes" became one of the first slogans to position a product around an emotional and physical experience rather than its ingredients. In 1931, illustrator Haddon Sundblom's paintings of Santa Claus drinking Coke standardised the modern image of a red-suited Santa across Western culture — an association so pervasive it is now inseparable from the holiday. In 1971, the "Hilltop" commercial — filmed in Italy with singers from around the world performing "I'd Like to Buy the World a Coke" — is widely considered one of the greatest television commercials ever made, positioning Coca-Cola as a symbol of cross-cultural unity. Furthermore, New Coke (1985) — the controversial formula change that lasted 79 days before reverting to Coca-Cola Classic — is now studied in business schools worldwide as one of the defining case studies in brand loyalty and consumer identity.
At 100 troy ounces of .999 fine silver, this lot represents a substantial silver position. The branded, officially licensed nature of the product — combined with 9Fine Mint's ISO certification — supports both investment-grade quality and collectible premium. The lot is IRA eligible, making it suitable for retirement account silver accumulation. Melt value calculation: current silver spot price multiplied by 100 troy oz.
Dealers acquire Lots of 100 to build inventory of one of the more distinctive privately minted silver products on the market. The Coca-Cola brand's global recognition means buyer awareness is effectively pre-built — no explanation required at the point of sale.
One hundred individually packaged Coca-Cola silver rounds, pre-organised in 5 sealed tubes of 20, is an unusual and memorable corporate gift option. The combination of The Coca-Cola Company's iconic brand with investment-grade silver is immediately understood as meaningful — a gift that will be kept rather than consumed.
The Coca-Cola memorabilia and collectibles market is one of the largest brand-specific collecting categories in the world, with an estimated collector base in the millions. Official Coca-Cola silver rounds — bearing formal trademark authorization — represent a premium tier of Coca-Cola collectibles that bridges the memorabilia and precious metals markets in a way no standard piece of branded merchandise can.
BOLD Precious Metals is an authorized dealer of 9Fine Mint products, affiliated with PCGS, NGC, and BBB-accredited with a 99.8%+ positive feedback rating. We carry the complete Coca-Cola silver collection from 9Fine Mint — 1 oz rounds, 1 oz bars, 5 oz bars, and 10 oz bars — in individual, tube, and lot formats.
This lot ships as 5 sealed Coca-Cola-branded tubes of 20. Free, fully insured domestic shipping on all orders of $199 or more.
📧 support@boldpreciousmetals.com
📞 1(866) 454-BOLD