how would such an odd shape happen. there are no folds to indicate 1 piece was folded over?? very weird shape indeed!
The only fold is the Sharp diagonal fold... The note is opened when you see both vignettes of GW... This is a cool note...I talked to an error expert about it and it is usually priced around XXX.XX Can you guess the right price?? RickieB
Very Nice Error Paper Currency compare with this ONE 1981A series Missing 2nd Print see attachment. thanks
sheets are not sequential, usually differing by 200,000 or so depending on print run right? So since we dont see the entire serial on the second note, isnt it possible they differ by the 200,000 or so?? for price - i would say high hundreds... close to 1000 even. I wil say 850.
I forgot to say that the note is in Gem condition...LOL The XXX.XX does not mean there are just these figures involved. DJ is the closest so far...:bigeyes: RickieB
No, on this series a sheet would have serial numbers above 96000000. Exactly: the two serials here are 37312698 and 37512698. You can see just enough of the top of the 5 in the lower note's serial number to be sure that it isn't a 3.... Doing some calculations from the serial numbers, we're looking at plate positions C4 and D4 of the sheet. Since the 32-subject sheets are cut in half vertically before being numbered, the lower left corner of the bottom note would've been the lower left corner of the half-sheet as well, and it looks like a couple notes' worth of paper got folded back over itself in the brief period between the printing of the serial numbers and the cutting operation. Hence the fairly strong transfer of the serial numbers, since they would've been quite fresh when the fold took place....
Check out this error guys... My uncutsheet of 4 1976* TWO US Dollor of Saint Louis District (H) and San Francisco District both ends with Asterisk. St. Louis with Watermark at the Back. And 1981 1$ missing 2nd print.
I've done some reading into paper money patterns. Paper money isn't my specialty, but some of errors are amazing. This one, for instance. I will guess $4,000
I was a printer back along time ago. We would have paper jams for one reason or another on our offset presses. Sometimes two sheets or more would go through the press as a unit. Some times the rems of paper would have some sheets folded in them and would run through the press. So, things happen, and thing get through all of the quality control systems. Enjoy the find. -O)