The Bureau of Engraving and Printing, the division of the Treasury that's responsible for printing all U.S. currency, provided the following explanation:
A us noTe with blue ink is backed by silver
Red ink indicates that it's a United States Note.
Actually, red ink was rarely used on US $1 bills. Most red-seal notes were $2, $5, and $100. That color identifies a bill as a "United States Note" rather than being a "Federal Reserve Note". Federal Reserve Notes are issued under the authority of the Federal Reserve Bank, while U. S. Notes were issued directly by the Treasury. Other than that, they served identical purposes so in the 1960s production was consolidated under the Federal Reserve. The last Red-Seal US Note was the 1966 Red Seal $100 bill.
Actually the ink color is red, and the bills were printed rather than stamped. The bill's red ink indicates that it's a United States Note, a form of currency that was issued from 1862 to 1966. Please see the Related Question for more information.
Please don't assume that every old US bill must be a silver certificate. Your bill's red ink and the words UNITED STATES NOTE across the top front indicate it's a US Note rather than a silver certificate. US Notes are a now-discontinued form of paper money issued until the late 1960s. There's more information at the Related Question.
A us noTe with blue ink is backed by silver
Red ink indicates that it's a United States Note.
Actually, red ink was rarely used on US $1 bills. Most red-seal notes were $2, $5, and $100. That color identifies a bill as a "United States Note" rather than being a "Federal Reserve Note". Federal Reserve Notes are issued under the authority of the Federal Reserve Bank, while U. S. Notes were issued directly by the Treasury. Other than that, they served identical purposes so in the 1960s production was consolidated under the Federal Reserve. The last Red-Seal US Note was the 1966 Red Seal $100 bill.
The main difference between the red ink and blue ink five dollar silver certificates is the date they were issued. The red seal 1953 series was issued in 1953 and is known as the "red seal" series due to the red serial numbers and seal on the note. The blue seal 1934 series was issued in 1934 and is known as the "blue seal" series due to the blue serial numbers and seal on the note. The 1934 series is generally more valuable to collectors due to its age and rarity compared to the 1953 series.
Actually the ink color is red, and the bills were printed rather than stamped. The bill's red ink indicates that it's a United States Note, a form of currency that was issued from 1862 to 1966. Please see the Related Question for more information.
A red Biro is a common type of ballpoint pen that writes in red ink. It is typically used for everyday writing tasks and note-taking.
blue ink is blue... not red
all you have to do is add a tiny bit of black ink into it.
Let me guess...you have a bottle of black ink and you want to do a red tattoo. The ONLY way you can do a red tattoo is to use red ink. No amount of dilution will make black ink red.
RED Ink Records was created in 1997.
No. they have INK in them. eg. blue ink,red ink,
No, it is not gold, just a metallic ink.