Blue ink was typically used on Silver Certificates, a form of currency that was once exchangeable for silver metal. However you'll need to post a more precise question that includes the bills' dates and what letter, if any, is next to the date because those facts help determine a bill's value. Note that the serial number ISN'T important, though.
A $5 bill with blue ink would typically have a blue seal. The value of the bill would still be $5 regardless of the ink color. It is the denomination of the bill that determines its value, not the ink color.
What is the value of a us blue ink 2 dollar certificate
There were no $1 bills printed with that date. Please check again and post a new question.
Please check again and post a new question. It's either not 1959, not $10, or not blue ink. The US didn't print any bills dated 1959, the last blue-ink silver certificates were $1 bills dated 1957 and the last $10 silver certificates were dated 1953.
Please check your bill again. All $100 bills printed from 1969 to 2009 had green ink. In any case a 2003 A bill is too new to have any extra value.
If we assume that the mass of paper is the same in a bill of each denomination, andthe mass of ink in each is also the same, then the value of any mass of $10-bills is10 times the value of the same mass of $1-bills.So the difference in their value is nine times the number of bills in either pile.
The $5 bills are worth a price close to $15 each. The price of the $5 bills will vary depending upon their condition
the Rf value value is 8.44 as the particles are lighter than the solvent
No. Some higher denomination bills have color-shifting ink with a tiny amount of metal in it, but no gold.
well-worn = $1.50 lightly worn = $2.00 crisp uncirculated = $6.00
All green-seal $2 bills are current-issue Federal Reserve Notes and are only worth face value if found in circulation.
There haven't been any blue-seal $20 bills issued since 1918. You may be seeing the blue underprinting of its background, or the bill may have been exposed to something like laundry detergent that affected the seal's green ink by removing some of its yellow component.
All US $100 bills printed since 1969 have been Federal Reserve Notes with green seals. The last blue-seal $100 bills were dated 1918. It's possible your bill was exposed to a chemical that changed the ink's color. Some strong detergents have been known to alter the blue/yellow balance in the ink used for the seal and serial numbers. You'd need to have it inspected in person to be sure, though.