Does This Make A Hill Of Beans?

Discussion in 'Paper Money' started by Agilmore01, Sep 18, 2015.

  1. Agilmore01

    Agilmore01 Well-Known Member

    1950 D $100 with the date shifted down a little. I haven't seen any like this, but at the same time, I haven't looked at many. Should I keep the line moving and give it to my next customer?
    uploadfromtaptalk1442596775661.jpg
    uploadfromtaptalk1442596794742.jpg
     
    paddyman98 likes this.
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  3. Collecting Nut

    Collecting Nut Borderline Hoarder

    Not only is the Series and date printed low, so is the green seal over the 100 on the right side of the bill. That seal should be centered from top to bottom without going lower than the base of the 100.The bills looks clean with minimal use. Only a slight worn or bent edge at the top right above the word Reserve Note. I'd keep it as it's an error in printing. Nice find.
     
    lucyray, Amos 811 and Agilmore01 like this.
  4. coinman1234

    coinman1234 Not a Well-Known Member

    I got a 1928e $5 red seal today with that, the whole date was lowered into the seal.
     
    techwriter likes this.
  5. techwriter

    techwriter Well-Known Member

    I agree with Collecting Nut about the $100; good find! When you have a chance please post a pic of the $5 red seal. I've been looking at printing shifts in those for a long time and would like to see yours when you have a chance.
     
  6. coinman1234

    coinman1234 Not a Well-Known Member

    I will post one in a few when I get the chance probably and the next few minutes.

    The banks had a 1934d Silver Certificate $5 and the 1928e Red Seal plus a '47 dime today
     
  7. coinman1234

    coinman1234 Not a Well-Known Member

    20150918_164441.jpg

    On top of the seal...
     
  8. techwriter

    techwriter Well-Known Member

    Thanks for the pic, appreciate it lots.:happy:
     
    coinman1234 likes this.
  9. Numbers

    Numbers Senior Member

    That 1928E isn't a print shift--that's the normal location of the date and the seal on that series.

    In general, the 1928-1934 notes have more overlaps like this than the later series. With the larger seals and taller serials, there wasn't room for everything to be separated. On some denominations a serial number tends to touch a border or a signature; on these $5's the seal tends to cover part of the series date.

    This wasn't considered a problem--after all, the seal already deliberately overlaps the legal-tender wording (it makes the notes harder to counterfeit photographically if the red and black printings overlap), so a few more overlaps aren't hurting anything. If you go back and look at the large-size notes, there are even more significant intersections between the intaglio and overprinted elements; on some designs it looks (by modern standards) like no space was left for the seal/serials at all, and they were just thrown on on top of everything else.

    The 1950D $100 with the series into the border is more unusual; by then, the seals and serials had been shrunk, and there was enough space that the various bits of the design were generally separated. But I still doubt that an overlap this small, on a denomination this high, is likely to generate much interest as an error....
     
  10. coinman1234

    coinman1234 Not a Well-Known Member

    Very good info, thanks so much for the post, very interesting :)
     
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