Anybody have one of these things in hand yet? Even on Ebay, it looks like nothing but pre-sales so far; no photos of actual sheets with readable...
I don't think he was agreeing with you: "I've seen all sorts of different coloring on all of them." Yes, there are some notes with a lot more...
That isn't a star--it's just a star. o_O More precisely, it's not a symbol for a replacement note, the way stars are used today. It's just an...
My guess is that the intaglio printing was done back then, while they had the 2009 $2 plates on the presses. But the serialling may well have...
Now that the $2 Lucky Money sheets are on sale: If you ordered one or several, please do let us know what serials you get. Hopefully it won't be...
The BEP printed the Series 2009 $1 notes on two different production lines: the older COPE that's been around since the '70s, and the new LEPE...
Wow, run the numbers on that. 16,888 sheets times 8 notes each is 135,104 notes. If they all have serials beginning 8888xxxx, then there can be...
These days, stars aren't generally printed for all banks in a single series. The 2013 $1's have had stars printed for five districts so far. The...
Also, the serialling worked differently back then--when a suffix letter was used, it *always* matched the prefix letter, until they ran out of...
And on top of that, the first letter in the serial should correspond to the series, and it doesn't. C is for Series 2001; Series 2003 should be D.
No, sheets haven't worked that way since the 12-subject era. On modern sheets, the last few digits of the serial will be the same on all the...
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...
The 1977 $50 B..* had 2,112,000 notes printed, in 20 mostly tiny runs. Yours is from run 17, a run of 256,000 notes, which sounds small by modern...
No, neither of those runs was issued in pack form. These days, some runs of star notes are used as full packs, and other runs are used as...
Each district starts at 00000001A with the appropriate district prefix. So, yes, there's an A00000001A and a B00000001A and so on up to...
Separate names with a comma.