It probably is, now that someone was brazen and stupid enough to cut up the first sheet of serials 1-6.
There are other sheets that have sold but they were other denoms and were SN 1-6. They brought $8k to $10k each. I don't think this sheet is worth that much.
Depends on the buyer. If you can find someone with an attachment to Lone Wolf, OK with deep pockets it might be. Of course, the 2010 census said the population of Lone Wolf was 438 so the chances might be on the slim side.
There have been banknotes in history that are sheet sized all by themselves. The Russian 500 rubles of 1912 is the most common, but there are many others that are very affordable and just as beautiful. My daughter has the largest single note I have seen - it is in a plexiglass holder and is several hundred years old.
I bet cutting the sheet made financial sense - 5 large fish almost always weigh more than 1 huge one.
It does sometimes. Particularly if there are no other sheets or even singles of notes available. I have a Scottish pound note remainder from 1891 that is one of 8 known, they were printed in sheets of four and both sheets were located in the early 1990s and cut up so that 8 collectors have a note. Otherwise they are totally off the market.
Gorgeous sheet Matt, would look great with my $5 T2! Let me know if you plan on selling it in the near future.
Ha.com has the sheet and one of the single notes listed. $9k+ for the sheet and ~$900 for serial #5. Then again the sheet of serials 1-6 was folded at some of the note boundaries.
Is it the Philippines 100,000 commemorative note? It's actually very collectible and huge. 8.5" x 14" in size. For comparison, a standard sheet of paper is 8.5" x 11".
Well, this doesn't look several hundred years old, so I'm guessing not. ;-) But rather than hijack this thread, I'm going to post a new one on this topic.