Please post a new question with a description of the condition(s) that you suspect are a printing error.
I have a 1935e circulated silver certificate with a double die error on the back of it what value does it have.
There can be many different printing errors. Please post a new question with a more complete description of the error.
This error can be worth $100 to $200 depending on the bill's condition. It's called a "stuck counter" error, and occurs when the two counters that print the serial numbers get out of sync with each other. It's subtle and easy to miss.
US bills can have many different printing errors. Please post a new, separate question with a more specific description of the error.
The spelling is NOT an error. Please see the Related Questions for more information.
Nowhere, unfortunately. Unless it has a spectacular printing error, NO 1957 $1 silver certificate is worth more than a few dollars.
Your bill isn't a printing error. The motto was first put on bills in the late 1950s, as part of the anti-communist hysteria that was prevalent at the time. Please see the question "What is the value of a 1935 D US 1 dollar silver certificate?" for more information.
You need to describe what the flaw is in order for us to get a better understanding of what exact error (or damage) you have. Chances are, if its a common silver certificate and it is an error it will raise its value. However, if it was done after the note left the press it is considered to be damage and will negatively impact its value.
I have a 1935e circulated silver certificate with a double die error on the back of it what value does it have.
$50.00
More information is needed because there are many different types of possible printing errors. Please post a new question with additional details.
Either a "wheat penny", silver dime, silver quarter, silver half dollar, half dollar, dollar, bicentenial quarter half-dollar dollar, error coin
There can be many different printing errors. Please post a new question with a more complete description of the error.
You can still buy uncut sheets from the Bureau of Engraving and Printing. This is not an error. Value is $4.
This error can be worth $100 to $200 depending on the bill's condition. It's called a "stuck counter" error, and occurs when the two counters that print the serial numbers get out of sync with each other. It's subtle and easy to miss.
Realistically, it's worth around $3.00.
It's almost certainly not a misprint. That's not the sort of monumental error the Treasury could make when printing a bill. In particular the last $5 silver certificates were in the 1953 series, and all US $5 bills since 1969 have been issued as green-seal Federal Reserve Notes.Either you have a fake that someone created privately, or a genuine bill that was altered. Either way, it would require an in-person examination of the bill.