Can someone point me to the rules for reproducting U.S. currency so I'm not arrested for counterfeiting? :)
I can find this page on the US Treasury website, which says images of currency must be one-sided and the wrong size, but there must be some other rule which allows more realistic reproductions if they're marked copy or facsimile, since I've seen them sold and used at reenactments. For example, the US fractional notes offered here marked facsimile.
I'd like to reproduce some post-war currency for a one-time public event, and I want to make sure I'm doing it just right. Couldn't find anything on the treasury site. Are there specifics about how big or where the word "facsimile" has to be, and other restrictions on size, color, etc.? Can someone point me to the actual treasury rules on this?
Hank Trent
hanktrent@voyager.net
I can find this page on the US Treasury website, which says images of currency must be one-sided and the wrong size, but there must be some other rule which allows more realistic reproductions if they're marked copy or facsimile, since I've seen them sold and used at reenactments. For example, the US fractional notes offered here marked facsimile.
I'd like to reproduce some post-war currency for a one-time public event, and I want to make sure I'm doing it just right. Couldn't find anything on the treasury site. Are there specifics about how big or where the word "facsimile" has to be, and other restrictions on size, color, etc.? Can someone point me to the actual treasury rules on this?
Hank Trent
hanktrent@voyager.net
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