There are 3 possibilities:
- The bill has a red R, or a red S but a blue seal. These were experimental bills.
- The seal is actually brown, and Hawaii is printed on the back.
Please determine which you have, then check the Related Question for more information.
The blue seal indicates your bill is a silver certificate, a form of paper money issued until the early 1960s. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1935 A US 1 dollar silver certificate?" for more information.
The brown seal indicates your bill was specially printed for use in Hawaii during WWII. There's more information at the question "What is the value of a 1935 A US 1 dollar bill with HAWAII on it?"
The blue seal indicates your bill is a silver certificate, a form of paper money issued until the early 1960s. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1935 A US 1 dollar silver certificate?" for more information.
Please check your bill again. The last red-seal $1 bills were dated 1928. If your bill is dated 1935A and has a brown seal along with HAWAII printed in various places, it's a special bill printed for use during WWII. If that's the case, please see the question "What is the value of a 1935 US 1 dollar bill with HAWAII on it?"
The blue seal indicates your bill is a silver certificate, a form of paper money issued until the early 1960s. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1935 A US 1 dollar silver certificate?" for more information.
The brown seal indicates your bill was specially printed for use in Hawaii during WWII. There's more information at the question "What is the value of a 1935 A US 1 dollar bill with HAWAII on it?"
The blue seal indicates your bill is a silver certificate, a form of paper money issued until the early 1960s. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1935 A US 1 dollar silver certificate?" for more information.
The brown seal indicates your bill was specially printed for use in Hawaii during WWII. There's more information at the question "What is the value of a 1935 A US 1 dollar bill with HAWAII on it?"
The blue seal indicates your bill is a silver certificate, a form of paper money issued until the early 1960s. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1935 A US 1 dollar silver certificate?" for more information.
Please check your bill again. The last red-seal $1 bills were dated 1928. If your bill is dated 1935A and has a brown seal along with HAWAII printed in various places, it's a special bill printed for use during WWII. If that's the case, please see the question "What is the value of a 1935 US 1 dollar bill with HAWAII on it?"
what is the value of a 1953 two dollar bill with a red seal
The blue seal indicates your bill is a silver certificate, a form of paper money issued until the early 1960s. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1935 A US 1 dollar silver certificate?" for more information.
The banner across its top and the blue seal indicate it's a silver certificate, a form of paper money that was discontinued in the 1960s. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1935 F US 1 dollar silver certificate?" for detailed information.
Please check your bill again and post a new, separate question. The only US bills dated 1935 were $1 bills and these had blue seals.
The banner across its top and the blue seal indicate it's a silver certificate, a form of paper money that was discontinued in the 1960s. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1935 F US 1 dollar silver certificate?" for detailed information.
$2.00
Your bill is a Federal Reserve Note rather than a certificate, and its date should be 1934 rather than 1935. The only brown-seal HAWAII bills printed as silver certificates were $1 bills. Please see one of the following for more information: "What is the value of a 1935 US 1 dollar bill with HAWAII on it?" "What is the value of a 1934 US 5 dollar bill with HAWAII on it?"