Error Dollar Bills
Contents |
Serial Numbers $10 Bills With Yellow/Gold Seal and Serial Numbers $100 Compound Interest Treasury Note $100 Interest Bearing Note with George error dollar bills value Washington $100 National Gold Bank Note $100 Winfield Scott Interest Bearing Note misprinted dollar bills $1000 First Charter National Bank Note $20 1882 Value Back Note Value $20 Bill from National Gold Bank error coins Value $20 Bill Missing the Green Treasury Seal $5 Bill December 23 1913 Value $50 National Gold Bank Note Value $500 Legal Tender Note Value 1862 & 1863 1861 $50 misprinted one dollar bill Bill Jackson and Chase 1862 $100 Spread Eagle Legal Tender Note 1862 $1000 Legal Tender Bill Value 1862 $50 Bill United States Note Value 1862 One Dollar Bill Value 1864 $10 Compound Interest Treasury Note Value 1864 $100 Treasury Note Value 1864 $20 Compound Interest Treasury Note Value 1864 $20 Treasury Note Value 1864 $50 Compound Interest Treasury Note
Misprinted 20 Dollar Bill
1864 $50 Three Year Treasury Note Value 1869 $20 Bill Legal Tender Value 1874 $50 Bill Value 1875 $20 United States Note Value 1875 $50 Bill United States Note Value 1875 $50 National Bank Note 1875 First Charter $500 National Bank Note 1878 $20 Legal Tender Note Value 1878 $20 Silver Certificate Value 1878 $50 Silver Certificate Value 1880 $10 Silver Certificate Value 1880 $100 Silver Certificate Value 1880 $20 Silver Certificate Value 1880 $20 Star Note - Values and Pricing 1880 $50 Silver Certificate Value 1880 $500 Legal Tender Value 1880 $500 Silver Certificate Value 1882 $10 Value Back National Currency 1882 $100 Value Back National Currency 1882 $1000 Gold Certificate Value 1882 $50 Brown Back Value 1882 $50 Date Back National Currency 1882 $50 Gold Certificate Value 1882 $50 Value Back National Bank Note 1882 Blue Seal $100 Bill Value 1882 Five Dollar Bill Value Blue Seal 1883 $50 Bill 1886 $10 Silver Certificate Value 1886 $20 Silver Certificate Value 1890 $1000 Treasury Note Grand Watermelon 1891 $100 Silver Certificate Value 1891 $100 Treasury Note
very low. If you find one on eBay or for sale from a source otherwise not confirmed to be knowledgeable, it is likely that the note is not genuine. Faulty Alignment (aka Miscut) Faulty
Misaligned Dollar Bill Value
alignment errors are characterized by once side of a note being properly centered, while dollar bill cut wrong the other is shifted to some degree. Shifting may be only minor or may be dramatic. These errors are relatively common misprinted 5 dollar bill and widely collected. The above example, graded PCGS 30PPQ (Very Fine) sold for $50 Insufficient Inking Insufficient inking errors result from poorly or inadequately filled printing plates. As a result, the note displays an http://oldcurrencyvalues.com/misprinted_one_dollar_bill/ image that is faint or not fully complete. Like other currency errors, insufficient inking may be only minor, or may affect large parts of the note. Most errors of this type have insufficient inking of the 1st or 2nd printing. This Series 1963B $1 PCGS graded 64PPQ sold for $871 Inverted Back Inverted back errors might also be called notes with upside-down backs. This type of error is caused by http://papermoneyguide.com/currency_errors.html a sheet being fed incorrectly (rotated 180 degrees) into the printing press for printing of the face (backs are printed first). Inverted back errors are not very common and command relatively high premiums. Blank Back or Blank Reverse A blank back error note is one that has printing on one side, but no printing on the other. These errors are often caused by two sheets being fed into a printing press at the same time. This complete blank back error was graded 66PPQ by PCGS and sold for $500 Double or Multiple Impressions Multiple impression errors usually display an image that appears “blurry” or “fuzzy”, and may occur when a sheet is mistakenly re-fed through the press after receiving printing, or a sheet staying in place after being printed and receiving a second impression of the same design. Obstructed Printings Obstructed printing errors occur when a piece of material (usually a stray piece of paper, tape, wrapping, etc) comes between the printing plate and the uncut sheet. The result is a portion of a note with blank area. Obstructed printings are popular with error collectors, with value increasing dramatically when the item causing the obstruction is retained with the error note. This 1977 $20 obstruction error was graded 58
after 3 seconds. Anti-Spam by CleanTalk