A special thank you to Michael from Illinois for the US $2 bill in the video, to Mihai from London / Romania for the Romanian Lei, and to Courtney from Seattle for the Vietnamese Dong! Video schedule is now back to normal (Tuesdays & Saturdays)
Hey! I was away for a bit and had a really sore throat forever which made voiceovers impossible. I filmed all this and only did the voiceover yesterday@@slumberycell4129
I came across a counterfeit 50 dollar australian bank note several years ago when working for a fast fashion store. I felt it was fake as soon as i touched it. It was ever so slightly longer and the plastic felt thicker.
Before we went polymer here in Canada, the $20 was the most counterfeited. Now counterfeiting has dropped some 75% I hear, and with the demonetizing of the old paper notes coming in soon, counterfeiting should become a non issue. Really like the look of the new Australian notes tho.
As an Australian I sometimes take these notes for granted. They’re honestly so beautiful and detailed plus extremely well made. I’m proud to be from the country that makes these.
@@cezrok5405 That is because the installer of your door is responsible for any warranty. Is there is any manufacturing issues, the company would need to contact us directly.
America is planning to upgrade to new Australian-inspired colourful polymer banknotes. It’s scheduled to happen right after they convert to the metric system.
The only reason the USA is not converting to the colourful polymer banknotes is because they refuse to have another country show them the way. America always has to get there first.
As an Australian eating at a Denny’s restaurant in LA I once left two one dollar bills as a tip. As I was paying the waitress came up to me and thanked me for the tip.Thats never happened to me before. I got back to my hotel room and realised I was short two $100 bills. US money all looks the same ....sadly. It was a $13 meal by the way !!
If America ever updates to plastic, they would need to keep green for tradition - but surely they could add other colours as well. Even if it just ended up as the red, white, and blue of their flag.
They skipped over the 20 because the 50 is the note with the largest counterfeit problem. They tested the technology with the 5 an 10 to ensure the ani counterfeit measures worked before releasing the 50.
Actually Nathan, Australians are very lucky that our currency wasn’t called the “royal” , as it very nearly was! When Australia was converting from pounds to decimal currency in the 1960’s, our Prime Minister at the time, Sir Robert Menzies, who was a very staunch royalist, was proposing to call the new currency “the Royal”. Thank goodness he was overruled by wiser heads!
Brian Williams, that is where you are wrong. The dollar notes will have white smudges and will be crippled. But it will not be ripped, maybe don’t use bleach if you’re gonna test it lol... not that I’m gonna use bleach in the washing machine...
Actually as a kid I was always confused when watching American tv as all the money looked the same, I'm proud to be an Aussie and to know that we posses such beauty in our land and in our pockets.
I really like how I can look inside my purse and know exactly how much money I have in cash simply by looking at the colour of my notes. When I travel I miss that privilege.
The reason they skipped the $20 is that the $50 note is circulated in by far the largest number, and is also the most commonly counterfeited and therefore the most in need of an update. The $5 and $10 were used as a kind of practice/test run, so they could start the brand new production technique off slowly, then they went straight to the $50 as it is more important to replace than the $20.
Disappointed you didn't mention the CSIRO (The Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation) that specifically invented polymer bank notes. They also invented wifi and loads of other things.
@Thomas Jacobs I might be proud of my country and race but at least I don't think my country or race is better than anyone else. No country or race is superior. There are many countries which are much more advanced than *clean and unfilthy* Australia.
Think of all the big things we have done - 'we' just don't brag about it....and get on with greater stuff - medicine (cancer research, IVF, eyes to name a few), health care, minimum wage, technology, sport and armed services (we challenge the world on a number of levels given our small population - just like our NZ bros) blah blah. We're not perfect and have our own domestic issues but we are unique!
With the way the markets are moving, I think a video on "How to profit from the present market amidst the recession" will be appreciated. I mean, I have heard of people still making more than a 100K within a few months, and I'd like to know if it is still possible in these times.
Have this at the back of your mind. There are good days, and there are bad days. It is a zero-sum game, However, always follow these tips: Save and Invest wisely and make sure to diversify your investments so when another is down, the other will be up. You can do so by getting an experienced specialist whose platform has diverse investment choices to choose from. By doing this, you give little room for regrets and perhaps gain more.
@frederick higson Funny enough, I can honestly relate. I don't know if I am permitted to drop this here, but run a check on "Sandra Yvonne Webster" she's good, and her platform has diverse investment choices.
It's genuinely difficult to tell if this comment section is just a really clever bot setup for a scam like most of the other investment recommendations, or just people being geniune and not realising how suspicious it looks.
Yeah I didn't know about it either! I have a $5 note from 2001 celebrating federation and I'm pretty sure that escaped someone's collection because I haven't seen one since then. I think those first notes are probably out of circulation and hidden away in people's collections or recycled by now.
@@catsrcoolas _". I think those first notes are probably out of circulation and hidden away in people's collections or recycled by now."_ Yep. And they have a resale value amongst collectors of... ten dollars. Because everyone kept them.
Dear: My money (I'm Australian) Thank you for being so durable, even when I accidentally scrunch you up or put you in the washing machine, you stay nice, I appreciate it
You forgot to mention that the new notes also have their denomination written repetitively like a thousand times in microscopic print. Good luck trying to counterfeit that!!
You could do a video 5x as long on Australian coins as well; I've been collecting Australian coins throughout the years (especially when I worked retail/hospitality), and have about 60 different coins, all legal tender (Aus has that many due to a commemorative theme, especially on the 50c coin. Year of the volunteer, Year of women, Princess Di's wedding, etc). Also managed to score a 1926 shilling and a few other pre 1966 coins. The best score I got was when someone used a British pound as a $1 coin; at the time the AUD was worth about 40p, so that was a pretty nice lol. A customer once used one of those 1988 $10 notes (0:57) to pay for something, which have been out of circulation for years. That's never leaving the collection!
@@rachaelwang6155 Nice! I have a stack of random foreign coins in the collection as well as Yen and Yuan from visiting Japan and living in China, but nothing from Vietnam.
I love Australian coins. There are so many different patterns. I have box display case just dedicated to the different $1 $2 50cent and 20cent coins. I especially love the coloured $2 coins.
Good! If I see any more “20 Questions Americans have for Australians” pages asking the “Why are your bank notes colourful? It’s money, not a fashion show!” crap, or incredulously asking why our notes are plastic (as if having notes not made of paper is absurd), I’ll just link them this video. Saves my breath.
That original polymer $10 note was first tested in my home town of Newcastle. My employer, the Newcastle Herald, covered the story and I got to hold one of the test notes. I remarked at the time how beautiful it was in comparison to the existing paper notes.
Nice video. In case it hasn't been mentioned in the comments, some new $20's have slipped into circulation as of April 2019. I had one last week and had I known about this channel I would have sent you one, (it was used to buy lunch).
The original first $10 polymer note was taken out of circulation. You apparently could scratch that hologram window off like a scratchie gambling card. 🤣🤣 I have one still though.
If your note has the letters AA in the serial number then its quite valuable, The AA series were the 1's you could scratch . They were withdrawn and a new series AB was issued.It looks identical but cant be scratched. If you have an AB $10 note its worth $10 :)
@ankles632 AA prefix means it was sold in special commemorative folders issued by the Reserve Bank of Australia. No AA prefix Bicentennial $10 banknote went into circulation unless someone took it out of a folder and spent it. Only the AB prefix bicentennial $10 banknotes went into circulation. There were only two prefixes AA and AB. The first prefix and serial number to look for is AB 10. There are no AB 00 or AB 01 et cetera. There were two releases of the bicentennial $10. First release was recalled die to the hologram being easy to rub off. The 2nd release had been adjusted with a varnish coating over the top of the hologram.
*Beautiful banknotes.* The durability makes the Aussie Dolla more sustainable. Singapore also got the same technology, which they source from Australia.
My mom collected money so she had a container filled with currencies from tons of other countries. Not really sure how she got the Australian $5 bill though. Anyways, when I was a kid she gave it to me and I continued to collect foreign money and unique US money
If you look at the $10 note next to the mans neck you’ll see the song 'waltzing Matilda' which was written by that man. You’ll need a magnifying glass tho.
Thanks for this video! I am Australian and seriously hated the updated bank notes (sentimentality) but after watching this video I understand the technology so much more and I can appreciate the effort put into the design.
B T Absolutely true. They printed the word ‘responsibility’ incorrectly three times on 480 million notes. In over two years 46 million notes have been released into circulation, with the rest stored to be issued as required. When the error was noticed, the people who made the note were devastated. But the best part, the true Aussie response (a snip of an email) from the Reserve Bank of Australia manager - “Don’t stress too much - no one died.”
I live in Australia and these notes are the best thing to ever happen in currency. Not only are they safe but you can get them wet and have no issues at all no need for a wallet for example if you go to the beach. They are awesome!
Probably about 3 weeks. I want to finish the travel journal (4-5 videos left, next one on Tuesday), and then it'll be finishing that. There's some great ones coming up too! :)
Another fun fact. Australian government science organisation the CSIRO experimented using the same polymer process and printers to print solar cells. I recall the got to about 13% efficient at low production costs but were pushing for higher efficiency to make it competitive and viable. The goal was cheap, light weight, quick to deploy panels, that were also 100% recyclable.
One thing you missed mentioning - on the $10 note (at least, on the old version) there's the ENTIRE Banjo Paterson poem "The Man from Snowy River" in microprint...
"A line from the Australia constitution" that's actually hilarious given our government spends 99 percent of their day disregarding our constitution and pretending it does not exist.
Each note also has micro print on the main body. The steps of Parliament on the 5 has the FULL constitution. Both sides of the 10, 20 and 50 have this feature as well, not just the stems of the flowers. There is also an image in the smaller window of the note stating the monetary value of the note itself. Australian notes and coins are badass and I love that I live here.
Actually Australia never had $1 or $2 “bills”! We call then ‘notes’ where I’m from, which is short for ‘banknote’. Check it out, it’s written on the currency. Actually, American currency has “banknote” written on it as well but all Americans call them bills for some reason.
Another fact about the Aussie polymer notes. If you place them (it works for all denominations of notes) flat on a table, and curl the left edge and the right edge up to touch each other, the very, very fine lines and colours marry up perfectly, and the same happens if you roll the top edge over and the bottom edge to meet in the middle, the very fine lines and colours all match perfectly. The design is brilliant.
One thing that not many are aware of is that New Zealand currency is made at the Australian mint in Canberra. This is why the coins are very similar in size to each other and why they weren't too far behind Australia when they changed to plastic.
We love our monopoly money, it's so pretty and very noticeable. I loved the focus on the new designs, I haven't managed to get my hands on any of them yet so being able to see those little details was wonderful.
I live in Australia (born 1996) and it wasn’t until I saw my first foreign currency in person when I realised that not all money is plastic. And it wasn’t until a couple of years ago when I realised that their money wasn’t waterproof???! I’ve had notes go through the wash and gone swimming with notes in my pocket and never even thought about it. Plus I didn’t realised you could tear a note either. I don’t know how people cope with such fragile money??!
A lot of the smaller Pacific island nations have their banknotes printed here in Australia too, so they use the same polymer technology and security features. The plastic banknotes are particularly useful for them; the humid tropical climate meant paper or cotton banknotes did not last very long...
When I first saw the new $5 note I really liked the changes. I'd swap the old notes in my wallet for new ones whenever I got them in my store. The new series really is as good as you say, and better in person. Love the tactile feature for the blind as well, has to be helpful I would think.
A little difficult to get your hand on krona banknotes and coins, seeing as everyone (including the Riksbank) is pushing for their phasing out and the use of electronic means instead. Swish (mobile payment solution linked to phone number and bank account) is already accepted by virtually any business or individual.
I remember when my English friend came to America for a trip she looked at the banknotes and went on about how colourful they were! God, I love Australian money. My banknotes are stronger than my self-esteem.
A special thank you to Michael from Illinois for the US $2 bill in the video, to Mihai from London / Romania for the Romanian Lei, and to Courtney from Seattle for the Vietnamese Dong! Video schedule is now back to normal (Tuesdays & Saturdays)
1st
What was with the no uploads for a while
i sent you some fan mail yesterday
Hey! I was away for a bit and had a really sore throat forever which made voiceovers impossible. I filmed all this and only did the voiceover yesterday@@slumberycell4129
@@HalfAsleepChris the fan mail i sent you should arrive in 6 to 10 business days from yesterday if the estimate was right
The $50 is the most counterfeited of the Australian banknotes, hence skipping the $20. :)
On top of it being the most used note, after the $5 note
*$10 note
I came across a counterfeit 50 dollar australian bank note several years ago when working for a fast fashion store. I felt it was fake as soon as i touched it. It was ever so slightly longer and the plastic felt thicker.
Also the old ten dollar note wasn't easy to counterfeit as banjo Patterson image was made up of micro text (his poem the man from snowy river)
Before we went polymer here in Canada, the $20 was the most counterfeited. Now counterfeiting has dropped some 75% I hear, and with the demonetizing of the old paper notes coming in soon, counterfeiting should become a non issue. Really like the look of the new Australian notes tho.
As an Australian I sometimes take these notes for granted. They’re honestly so beautiful and detailed plus extremely well made. I’m proud to be from the country that makes these.
Same
AUSSIE AUSSIE AUSSIE OI OI OI
You must be chinese ?
Cez rok very funny joke
*not*
@@cezrok5405 That is because the installer of your door is responsible for any warranty. Is there is any manufacturing issues, the company would need to contact us directly.
I prefer the original illustrations on the first set of polymers though
America is planning to upgrade to new Australian-inspired colourful polymer banknotes. It’s scheduled to happen right after they convert to the metric system.
Good one, Albert !
Albert Batfinder 😂😂😂👍
OOF
That's great! I hope they are not only difficult to counterfeit, they are more durable and resistant to tear as well.
The only reason the USA is not converting to the colourful polymer banknotes is because they refuse to have another country show them the way. America always has to get there first.
America: We have the most advance anti-counterfeiting currency in the world
Australia: 'grabs another beer' Yeah righto mate
No worries.
Up the dollaridoos 💪
@@ChubbsterBrown wut
@@shakielkms8719 Don't worry mate. We'll give ya a beer, call ya Bruce, and you'll be talkin' Strine before the sun goes down.
@@Majenta_Turkeysandvichs you think im not strayan?
As an Aussie reading these comments and everyone talking about how good they look, I be thinking about how good they smell
As a fellow Aussie I can confirm this, especially new notes from the mint!
Smells amazing. Thought I was the only one that thought our dollars smelt great haha
@David Sorell Geez man, I dunno, I still have a $2 note, it was the first money I ever earned, that smells pretty good.
@@matthewjacques180 THE NEWLY PRINTED NOTES SMELL LIKE SHTTT
S N I F F 👌🏻 Good old dollarydoos
Never thought 14 year old Daniel Radcliffe would teach me about the banknotes of the counrtry I live in
Ikr
Very good call.
hahahahaha
😂😂😂 I couldn’t have said it better
Aussie Aussie Aussie!
As an Australian eating at a Denny’s restaurant in LA I once left two one dollar bills as a tip. As I was paying the waitress came up to
me and thanked me for the tip.Thats never happened to me before. I got back to my hotel room and realised I was short two $100 bills.
US money all looks the same ....sadly. It was a $13 meal by the way !!
Aside from the size $100 dollar bill looks totally different than than a one dollar bill. Unless this was over 20yrs ago.
I call BS on that
Aha hahaha rip, I have not left Australia in my life so I cannot relate but i am glad it's not me
If America ever updates to plastic, they would need to keep green for tradition - but surely they could add other colours as well.
Even if it just ended up as the red, white, and blue of their flag.
Apparently Americans go by the faces of the presidents on the notes. Not sure in a darkened bar.
They skipped over the 20 because the 50 is the note with the largest counterfeit problem. They tested the technology with the 5 an 10 to ensure the ani counterfeit measures worked before releasing the 50.
I’m Aboriginal and I’m sopround to have my people on a Aussie notes.
Indigenous people from all over the world need this type of recognise tbh ! ✨🙌🏽
Too true!
I cant name another country that has a First nation people on there notes
As a white Australian, I'm proud of your people on our notes. No ignoring the natives!
Coins, too.
Yung Niqqa I am European Australian, and on behalf of my people I am sorry for taking over this amazing country! Australians unite, mate!
Proud to be calling this amazing country home❤️
From an Afghan-Aussie ❤️
glad to have ya here!
Glad you're here mate! We're glad to have ya! 🍻
Best Wishes from an Kyrgyz-Aussie. 🇰🇬❤️🇦🇺
I’m proud too
- Fellow Aussie
We have a proud Afghan- Australian history together,going back 150 years, God Bless you Zach.
Honestly, I wouldn't even be mad if we changed the name from dollar to dollarydoo.
I wouldn't mind either. Roll out the 900 hundred dollarydoo single note for distribution into the economy lol
Actually Nathan, Australians are very lucky that our currency wasn’t called the “royal” , as it very nearly was! When Australia was converting from pounds to decimal currency in the 1960’s, our Prime Minister at the time, Sir Robert Menzies, who was a very staunch royalist, was proposing to call the new currency “the Royal”. Thank goodness he was overruled by wiser heads!
@@lordchickenhawk Yes true but you gotta admit it would be pretty funny.
@@horizon5761 ...horribly funny!
We should have a new one with Steve Erwin and Russel Coight on it as well.
The best thing about plastic notes is they will go through a washing machine undamaged.
Brian Williams, that is where you are wrong. The dollar notes will have white smudges and will be crippled. But it will not be ripped, maybe don’t use bleach if you’re gonna test it lol... not that I’m gonna use bleach in the washing machine...
This is oddly relatable
I've washed many an Aussie banknote and been glad that it happened post 1990.
Explosive Nut bruh Australia doesn’t have one dollar bank notes
I’ve done this so many times!
Actually as a kid I was always confused when watching American tv as all the money looked the same, I'm proud to be an Aussie and to know that we posses such beauty in our land and in our pockets.
@@michaelc2472 unfortunately yes
@@michaelc2472 not many good australian shows tbh
@@michaelc2472 Yeah we get stereotyped like crazy, but in reality we are just like other first world countries.
In some of our pockets*
I really like how I can look inside my purse and know exactly how much money I have in cash simply by looking at the colour of my notes. When I travel I miss that privilege.
The reason they skipped the $20 is that the $50 note is circulated in by far the largest number, and is also the most commonly counterfeited and therefore the most in need of an update. The $5 and $10 were used as a kind of practice/test run, so they could start the brand new production technique off slowly, then they went straight to the $50 as it is more important to replace than the $20.
As an Australian, I have to say we have some kickarse banknotes. But unfortunately I barely use them these days. Everythings pretty much eftpos.
I'm the same. I wish that I had some of these new notes though!
I always get my money out of the bank i hate not having money on me ya never know when someone doesn't have Eftpos.
thats your choice
Efpos is all well and good till a merchant has a high surcharge or out bush.
Same here, but these days I try to keep it bit old skool and real.
I also (almost) purely only buy Aussie owned products.
What people don't realize is that there is a huge deficiency in the Australian bank notes. I don't have enough of them.
cause everyone uses eftpos
@@bromellos I think hes making a joke about being poor lol
r/wooosh
Same here! I should have way more!
Damn, beat me to it. lol
Disappointed you didn't mention the CSIRO (The Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation) that specifically invented polymer bank notes. They also invented wifi and loads of other things.
They didn't invent the esky.
@@nickrobinson2711 No one cares who invented a plastic box
I've heard rumours they had a LOT to do with mobile phones too (not the crappy radio patch jobs ATT or whoever had).
Captainplanet lots of fisherman,campers, bbq party guests and medical transport couriers will say otherwise.
CSIRO doesn’t get enough credit
This video was definitely aimed at trying to make us Australian's feel special lol.
Mahoneywj it worked
That's cos we are, mate.
Because we are! :)
We are special
@Thomas Jacobs I might be proud of my country and race but at least I don't think my country or race is better than anyone else. No country or race is superior. There are many countries which are much more advanced than *clean and unfilthy* Australia.
Gilmore - "No foe shall gather our harvest"
Emu - "Hold my beer"
But have you heard about the Emu War (spoiler alert, the Emus won)
i'm aussie and i loved the old $10 note because behind banjo Paterson's head in micro print is one of his poems man from snowy river
If you look closely, the text is still there, just even smaller.
I loved looking at all the notes and trying to find the micro print. Hard mode was trying to read them without a magnifying glass.
Oddly enough, little things like these make me feel proud to be an Australian
Think of all the big things we have done - 'we' just don't brag about it....and get on with greater stuff - medicine (cancer research, IVF, eyes to name a few), health care, minimum wage, technology, sport and armed services (we challenge the world on a number of levels given our small population - just like our NZ bros) blah blah. We're not perfect and have our own domestic issues but we are unique!
@David Sorell Yep - unlimited data on NBN and STILL get buffering occasionally...
Kim McC don’t even try to tell me you thought you ever expect nbn to be good lol
@@neonicplays1364 Delusional right?
With the way the markets are moving, I think a video on "How to profit from the present market amidst the recession" will be appreciated. I mean, I have heard of people still making more than a 100K within a few months, and I'd like to know if it is still possible in these times.
Have this at the back of your mind. There are good days, and there are bad days. It is a zero-sum game, However, always follow these tips: Save and Invest wisely and make sure to diversify your investments so when another is down, the other will be up. You can do so by getting an experienced specialist whose platform has diverse investment choices to choose from. By doing this, you give little room for regrets and perhaps gain more.
@frederick higson Funny enough, I can honestly relate. I don't know if I am permitted to drop this here, but run a check on "Sandra Yvonne Webster" she's good, and her platform has diverse investment choices.
It's genuinely difficult to tell if this comment section is just a really clever bot setup for a scam like most of the other investment recommendations, or just people being geniune and not realising how suspicious it looks.
Man Aussies have everything to be proud of even bank notes
I honestly didn't know about the 1988 polymer note. I've never seen, nor heard of it before. Thanks for teaching me something.
Yeah I'm surprised I've never seen one before; they're not that old.
Yeah I didn't know about it either! I have a $5 note from 2001 celebrating federation and I'm pretty sure that escaped someone's collection because I haven't seen one since then. I think those first notes are probably out of circulation and hidden away in people's collections or recycled by now.
I've only seen the $1 and $2 notes too. didn't even know there was a $10 like that.
@@catsrcoolas _". I think those first notes are probably out of circulation and hidden away in people's collections or recycled by now."_
Yep. And they have a resale value amongst collectors of... ten dollars. Because everyone kept them.
Came out when I was in high school. I was so excited the first time I got one. They were actually quite beautiful.
I like these bank note videos, I think some of the bank notes are very interesting and pretty!
Thanks!
Its currently 3:10am here in Australia. I absolutely love your videos mate, keep it up!
Thanks a lot! :)
Dear: My money (I'm Australian)
Thank you for being so durable, even when I accidentally scrunch you up or put you in the washing machine, you stay nice, I appreciate it
Fun Fact: The dollar bills are different sizes so the blind can identify which note is which
no there not they have tose lumpy dot things on them.
It’s called Braille
@@ilovetigers5910 oh ok
@@r3alplayzz404 They also are different sizes - its both!
Same width, different lengths. Plus they have bar codes on the edges so the value can be read by machine.
You forgot to mention that the new notes also have their denomination written repetitively like a thousand times in microscopic print. Good luck trying to counterfeit that!!
The old bank notes had that as well
This makes me appreciate the notes I have in my wallet! Australian here btw.
Yeah! STRAYA
Yea, extracting oil to make polymer. So green
QLD>NSW
G'Day. Mate.
@@jackryan5268 TAS > AUS
Now I feel special that I live in Australia.
Gares me too
Gares same
hey gares lol
I never knew that we inspired the whole see-through banknotes thing. That's so cool!
You’re welcome.
-Every Australian Watching this Video.
Great video, from an Aussie. Personally, I'd love it if the re-issue of the $100 looked exactly like your suggestion.
You could do a video 5x as long on Australian coins as well; I've been collecting Australian coins throughout the years (especially when I worked retail/hospitality), and have about 60 different coins, all legal tender (Aus has that many due to a commemorative theme, especially on the 50c coin. Year of the volunteer, Year of women, Princess Di's wedding, etc). Also managed to score a 1926 shilling and a few other pre 1966 coins. The best score I got was when someone used a British pound as a $1 coin; at the time the AUD was worth about 40p, so that was a pretty nice lol.
A customer once used one of those 1988 $10 notes (0:57) to pay for something, which have been out of circulation for years. That's never leaving the collection!
If i remember correctly i have a 5000 vietnamese dong coin somewhere cuz someone confused it for a dollar or smth like that ahaha
@@rachaelwang6155 Nice! I have a stack of random foreign coins in the collection as well as Yen and Yuan from visiting Japan and living in China, but nothing from Vietnam.
@@deanchur oh damn theyre almost like a souvenir ahaha
I love your informative videos! Especially the ones about money.
Thanks a million!
The kid who designed the new Australian notes came from my school, he was partially sighted
Same as our government
Cez rok - 😂😂😂
Being an Australian, this made me feel very patriotic.
Same
The Australian dollar...
IS A COIN
A beautiful one I might say.
I love Australian coins. There are so many different patterns. I have box display case just dedicated to the different $1 $2 50cent and 20cent coins. I especially love the coloured $2 coins.
@@kugelschreiber9605 A $2 coin that was printed with colour on the wrong side was sold for $6500 lol
Oh i get dollar reffering to one dollar not more than one
Slime Wiz it’s actually the name of our currency
I love this series. As an Australian-Indian it’s so well made!!!!
@Justin B He's an Aussie, you're a dumbass.
**...looks at my stale grubby American dollars...**
PaThEtIc get on our plastic level of currency
Good! If I see any more “20 Questions Americans have for Australians” pages asking the “Why are your bank notes colourful? It’s money, not a fashion show!” crap, or incredulously asking why our notes are plastic (as if having notes not made of paper is absurd), I’ll just link them this video. Saves my breath.
This video weirdly made me proud to be a Australian, I never paid much attention to our currency but this video made me realise its beauty. Thank you
Evrything in this video I never new about before I learned something new thanks chris
Not perfect until they put Steve Irwin on the $100 note
Rae Rae and a stingray on the other side
They actually might though
@@SwadianKnight101 or a stingray as the hologram in the transparent section
No, Hamish Blake
@@SwadianKnight101 Dang that hurts
i always learn so much from your videos! as an australian this makes me very happy
American here. I would love to see more colorful and durable dollars in our future.
That original polymer $10 note was first tested in my home town of Newcastle. My employer, the Newcastle Herald, covered the story and I got to hold one of the test notes. I remarked at the time how beautiful it was in comparison to the existing paper notes.
Nice video. In case it hasn't been mentioned in the comments, some new $20's have slipped into circulation as of April 2019. I had one last week and had I known about this channel I would have sent you one, (it was used to buy lunch).
I had one a few weeks back, and when watching the video I started thinking "wait, did I imagine that?"
The original first $10 polymer note was taken out of circulation. You apparently could scratch that hologram window off like a scratchie gambling card. 🤣🤣
I have one still though.
That brings back memories. I'd heard/seen a few try to pass off blank plastic sheets as was an $x note but the ink vanished lol.
Yeah, it wasn't a "great success" as he put it - they recalled it, then reissued it about 9 months later.
If your note has the letters AA in the serial number then its quite valuable, The AA series were the 1's you could scratch . They were withdrawn and a new series AB was issued.It looks identical but cant be scratched. If you have an AB $10 note its worth $10 :)
Pauly Go to your library and get a coin collectors reference and check it could ber worth $25 to $1000
@ankles632 AA prefix means it was sold in special commemorative folders issued by the Reserve Bank of Australia. No AA prefix Bicentennial $10 banknote went into circulation unless someone took it out of a folder and spent it. Only the AB prefix bicentennial $10 banknotes went into circulation. There were only two prefixes AA and AB. The first prefix and serial number to look for is AB 10. There are no AB 00 or AB 01 et cetera. There were two releases of the bicentennial $10. First release was recalled die to the hologram being easy to rub off. The 2nd release had been adjusted with a varnish coating over the top of the hologram.
insane production quality. Amazing video HBO should let you do a show.
*Beautiful banknotes.* The durability makes the Aussie Dolla more sustainable.
Singapore also got the same technology, which they source from Australia.
Yesss omg loving our new notes. Cant wait for the next ones! Working as a cashier, i see soooo many different coins and notes
I live in the U.S. but have an Australian $5 bill. Thought the plastic was cool ever since I was a kid
What's the story behind you getting your hands on it if you don't mind sharing.
My mom collected money so she had a container filled with currencies from tons of other countries. Not really sure how she got the Australian $5 bill though. Anyways, when I was a kid she gave it to me and I continued to collect foreign money and unique US money
Have you folded the five to see the fish swallowing a penis?
@@jamesrustles8670 thank god you can still do that on the new ones
@@jamesrustles8670 the more you know 🌈
0:29 is it just me or did I just see Queen Elizabeth blinked?
If you look at the $10 note next to the mans neck you’ll see the song 'waltzing Matilda' which was written by that man. You’ll need a magnifying glass tho.
I love the transparent window, amazing design, such beatiful notes!
Thanks for this video!
I am Australian and seriously hated the updated bank notes (sentimentality) but after watching this video I understand the technology so much more and I can appreciate the effort put into the design.
the aussie twenty dollar note also has fine print on Mary Reibeys hair that reads “twenty dollar note”
76 down votes from counterfeiters.
You know, I always wondered If you could actually use the map of the parliment house on the back of the 5$ note.
Depends if you are in new or old parliament house
USA: our bank notes r the most secure and environmentally friendly
Aus: *hold my vegemite mate*
You gotta appreciate how cool learning about currency is. Great job Half Asleep Chris
I haven’t even watched yet but I know I love it ❤️ you always do amazing work ❤️
Thanks so much! :)
Australia printed typo 46 million times on $50 bills, central bank admits.
B T
Absolutely true. They printed the word ‘responsibility’ incorrectly three times on 480 million notes.
In over two years 46 million notes have been released into circulation, with the rest stored to be issued as required.
When the error was noticed, the people who made the note were devastated.
But the best part, the true Aussie response (a snip of an email) from the Reserve Bank of Australia manager - “Don’t stress too much - no one died.”
Best video yet! This is my favorite seri
es. (Is this a series?)
Ay thanks! @Aleksander Budzinski
I live in Australia and these notes are the best thing to ever happen in currency. Not only are they safe but you can get them wet and have no issues at all no need for a wallet for example if you go to the beach. They are awesome!
This is such a great video! Very informative and beautifully done. So proud to be an Aussie!
They also survive going through the washing machine and dryer if accidentally left in your pocket.☺️
Good for money laundering
Just don't use bleach.
Dont put them in a microwave...they shrink big time ...dont ask me how I know this LOL
Ankles How do you know that?
planetX15 because he obviously put it in the microwave you bellend
What a refreshing video
Thanks glad to hear it!
Remember me when your’e famous
I hate to ask but..
When will the next Great British Adventure come out?
Probably about 3 weeks. I want to finish the travel journal (4-5 videos left, next one on Tuesday), and then it'll be finishing that. There's some great ones coming up too! :)
Another fun fact. Australian government science organisation the CSIRO experimented using the same polymer process and printers to print solar cells. I recall the got to about 13% efficient at low production costs but were pushing for higher efficiency to make it competitive and viable. The goal was cheap, light weight, quick to deploy panels, that were also 100% recyclable.
One thing you missed mentioning - on the $10 note (at least, on the old version) there's the ENTIRE Banjo Paterson poem "The Man from Snowy River" in microprint...
The company that makes our Aussie notes also makes them for a few of the pacific nations.
When the new fiver came out my friends and I could wait to see it. The new notes are so nice
"A line from the Australia constitution" that's actually hilarious given our government spends 99 percent of their day disregarding our constitution and pretending it does not exist.
Your spot on , they dont follow any constitution
@Michael Rogers yes i heard this as well
I really love that they added Braille to our notes, not that I need it but it makes me happy
Each note also has micro print on the main body. The steps of Parliament on the 5 has the FULL constitution. Both sides of the 10, 20 and 50 have this feature as well, not just the stems of the flowers.
There is also an image in the smaller window of the note stating the monetary value of the note itself. Australian notes and coins are badass and I love that I live here.
As an Australian I still think we should replace one of the people from the $100 note to Steve Irwin.
We need a total redesign of the US bank notes.
One thing you forgot about what we no longer have 1 & 2 dollar bills anymore.
I wish we still did and got rid of the gold coins.
@@npg68 me too, mate...
Actually Australia never had $1 or $2 “bills”! We call then ‘notes’ where I’m from, which is short for ‘banknote’. Check it out, it’s written on the currency. Actually, American currency has “banknote” written on it as well but all Americans call them bills for some reason.
@@johncanalese588 Really Bills, Notes same bloody thing who cares.
BoomerAUS if you’re an Aussie you ought be ashamed! We have enough Americanisation of our country and language as it is. Why perpetuate it.
Another fact about the Aussie polymer notes. If you place them (it works for all denominations of notes) flat on a table, and curl the left edge and the right edge up to touch each other, the very, very fine lines and colours marry up perfectly, and the same happens if you roll the top edge over and the bottom edge to meet in the middle, the very fine lines and colours all match perfectly. The design is brilliant.
One thing that not many are aware of is that New Zealand currency is made at the Australian mint in Canberra. This is why the coins are very similar in size to each other and why they weren't too far behind Australia when they changed to plastic.
all we need now is a 150 bank note with steve irwin on it.
posty or we could just get rid of the queen from the $5
@@jacobc590 DICK BRAIN
@@tachisme ANOTHER DICK BRAIN
I love bank notes
Yeah our new notes are pretty good looking compared to other stuff. A lot of thought has gone into it
Proud Aussie! Often take the little things for granted but this video is awesome
We love our monopoly money, it's so pretty and very noticeable. I loved the focus on the new designs, I haven't managed to get my hands on any of them yet so being able to see those little details was wonderful.
I live in Australia (born 1996) and it wasn’t until I saw my first foreign currency in person when I realised that not all money is plastic. And it wasn’t until a couple of years ago when I realised that their money wasn’t waterproof???!
I’ve had notes go through the wash and gone swimming with notes in my pocket and never even thought about it. Plus I didn’t realised you could tear a note either. I don’t know how people cope with such fragile money??!
Remember when everyone hated the new $5 at first because we genuinely thought that the middle strip was blue and not clear
I was in the USA 10 years ago and they said "we are going to plastic notes soon"
A lot of the smaller Pacific island nations have their banknotes printed here in Australia too, so they use the same polymer technology and security features. The plastic banknotes are particularly useful for them; the humid tropical climate meant paper or cotton banknotes did not last very long...
When I first saw the new $5 note I really liked the changes. I'd swap the old notes in my wallet for new ones whenever I got them in my store. The new series really is as good as you say, and better in person. Love the tactile feature for the blind as well, has to be helpful I would think.
As someone who as lived in Australia and the US I can say that Australia’s currency is a lot cooler.
America’s money is just kinda stale
Beautiful bank notes. Could you do a video on the Swedish krona?
A little difficult to get your hand on krona banknotes and coins, seeing as everyone (including the Riksbank) is pushing for their phasing out and the use of electronic means instead. Swish (mobile payment solution linked to phone number and bank account) is already accepted by virtually any business or individual.
@@TrigramThunder that's really sad, I think they're among the most beautiful banknotes.
Well, you learn something new everyday.
Australian by the way.
I remember when my English friend came to America for a trip she looked at the banknotes and went on about how colourful they were! God, I love Australian money. My banknotes are stronger than my self-esteem.
Our new Aussie notes are beautiful. Works of art really!