Yes, they do
A cost comparison matching equal units of cost for brevity, clarity and simplicity.
yes
*Leather cording*pony beads*key ringCut about an 8" piece of leather cording. Bend in 1/2 and knot over the keyring at the center of the cord. (you will have two tails of cording hanging down from the keyring). Now, let your child be creative with threading the beads. They can thread the beads onto both tails, or thread a couple then knot, and continue on like we did. Make sure to leave enough cording to knot at the end. Have fun!
Some serial numbers represent unusual number patterns, but are only worth a few dollars. There would have to be some error on the bill and a collector willing to pay a high premium for it. This does not currently exist in the numismatic market.
One may find wholesale gift wrap from the "Mr. Gift Wrap" website, or you may also find some at the 'Dollar Days' website. They are sold at many different patterns and prices.
one hundred thity dollar for one
8-8-11>>> Although "Miss Liberty" is seated, the coin is not a Liberty Seated dollar (1840-1873), it's a Gobrecht Dollar (1836-1839) for all years Patterns and Circulation issues were struck. For 1839 only 600 circulation issues were struck. Restrikes made in the 1850s to the 1870s are known. Authentic Mint State examples have retail values of more than $35,000.00. NOTE: The entire series of these coins is known to have replicas, copy's & counterfeits.
The average lifespan of a $5 bill is about 5.5 years, but this can vary based on usage and circulation patterns. Like all paper currency, $5 bills are constantly being inspected and replaced by the Federal Reserve as they become worn out or damaged.
No. There are many urban legends about "hidden" symbols such as owls, monkeys, and spiders on American paper money but despite what some people fervently claim, none of them are true. The human brain is "wired" to search for patterns, so much so that it's common for all of us to find them where no patterns really exist. Designs on bills are intentionally very complex to make them harder to counterfeit, and the normal response to those intricacies is to try to organize them by looking for relationships to things we already know. It's the same mental functioning that lets Westerners see the Man in the Moon and people from Asian cultures see a rabbit, or makes us turn a summer cloud into a sky-borne elephant.
Domesticated pygmies are small, being relatively close to the size of a dollar bill in length and slightly wider in width. When viewed from the top and side, their should be a teardrop shape. Their backs are covered in roughly 6,000 quills of varying colors and patterns; their bellies are covered in a soft cream/white fur, while their faces are typically darker. Their legs are long and fragile. They have large eyes.
No. That's an urban legend. According to the US Bureau of Engraving and Printing, neither of these items are an intentional part of the design. They're artifacts of the printing process. The design is created by a mechanical engraving machine that produces intricate patterns called engine turnings. The repeating designs by coincidence do appear to make owl- and spider-like images but it's absolutely not intentional.
No. That's an urban legend. According to the US Bureau of Engraving and Printing, neither of these items are an intentional part of the design. They're artifacts of the printing process. The design is created by a mechanical engraving machine that produces intricate patterns called engine turnings. The repeating designs by coincidence do appear to make owl- and spider-like images but it's absolutely not intentional.