There are pictures of high-value bills at the Related Link.
10 dollar bills have a picture of Alexander Hamilton, the first Secretary of the Treasury. 100 dollar bills have a picture of statesman, inventor, and Founding Father Benjamin Franklin.
ALL $100 bills carry a picture of Benjamin Franklin. Bills with pictures of Elvis, George Bush, the Easter Bunny, Santa Claus, and other figures both real and mythical are simply standard bills that have been altered by pasting a sticker over the real portrait. They're not official Treasury issues and aren't worth anything extra.
The link below has pictures and facts about the designs used on US $50 bills since 1928.
No one, the Icelandic coins all have a picture of fish on the front and the coat-of-arms on the back. Three of the four paper bills do however have pictures of persons. (See www.sedlabanki.is)
I tried to find the answer to this question and was unable to. I did find out he used his hat for letters, bills, and papers instead of his pockets.
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doors, chocolate bars, book covers, TV screens, boxes, paper, picture frames, pictures, drawers, cell phones, wallets, dollar bills, notebooks, etc.
There are no 1986-dated $1 bills, but regardless of the date, bills with pictures of Santa, Elvis, the Easter Bunny, et. al. on them are novelty items with no added value. Normally they're made by pasting a picture on top of Washington's portrait.
The back of the United States ten dollar bill has a picture of the U.S. Treasury building in Washington, DC Note that all US bills have captions identifying their pictures and portraits.
The size of any picture in pixels depends on how the picture is taken. You can take the picture to have as many or as few pixels as you want.
It's not a monument on the back of the US $10 bill. It's a picture of the Treasury Department building. Note that all US bills have captions below the portraits and pictures identifying the image shown.