replacing the current money supply
The United States government is replacing the current money supply. The bill to be replaced is the 100$,50$,20$,10$, and 5$. The new money characteristics include a portrait watermark seeable when up to a light, a developed security thread that shines under ultraviolet radiance, faint background colors, micro printing, and enhanced color-shifting that alters color when money is titled. The new money is made through this process: The money is printed on a unique paper made by Crane Paper Organization. The paper used to print the new money is made of 75 percent cotton and 25 percent linen. The blended paper has unique blue and red threads woven all over. Before the paper is used to print new money, the image of the money to be printed is first scratched into soft steel plates. The steel plate is called the master dies. The ink is then spread on the printing plates and then wiped off. The ink is wiped off so that it’s ink that is left in the grooves of the plates. The plates are then compressed into the unique blended paper with twenty mass of pressure. High-speed circling printing presses are used to make money. After the money is printed, it is checked for defects. If there are no defects, the cash is printed again with a simple printing method that is diverging from the intaglio printing.
The United States Federal Reserve seal is published in black ink, as the green ink is used to print the United States Treasury logo and the serial figures. Lastly, cutters split the big sheets into individual money. After cutting, the money is packaged and sent to one of the Federal Reserve regions for allocation to banks. The new money value will be guaranteed through trade in foreign exchange markets. To prevent counterfeit of the money, it will have 3D security to the left of Benjamin Franklin’s portrait, seeable only on the front of the money. The five, ten, and twenty-dollar bill will have enhancement of the color-shifting ink that is also present on the bottom right corner. For the one hundred dollar bill, a color-changing liberty is found inside a copper-colored inkwell.