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HOW TO MAKE DOLLARS

by Ustad | 8:38 AM in , , , , |

The U.S. Bureau of Engraving and securities in the U.S. Treasury on a daily basis, day and night, men and women working to create what is one of the foundations of the modern world. They produce the banknotes.

This is where the money come into the world: the U.S. Bureau of Engraving and securities in the U.S. Treasury.
Page 20-dollar bills.
The notice indicated the total cost of each pack of 20-dollar bills.
Sheets of 20-dollar bills (a total of 10,000), which, after applying the printing of the federal treasury, total capital of up to $ 6.4 million.
William Bolden, a worker of the Bureau of Engraving and securities in the U.S. Treasury, put sheets of 20-dollar bills in a special machine, by which print is applied to the Treasury. "For me it is not money," said Bolden. "It's just colored pieces of paper."
Daily through the hands of William Bolden held millions of dollars - his job is to put the finished sheets of bank notes in a special machine that does print on the bills treasury.
William Bolden is watching both the bill is applied to seal the Treasury. He is responsible to monitor and also to ensure that all elements of the press were clearly visible, and every word in it can be read. "We produce a product in which the country badly needs, and therefore it should be clearly and correctly."
A view through the magnifying lens on a 20-dollar bill to the Bureau of Engraving and securities in the U.S. Treasury.
William Bolden builds a machine for applying seals on Treasury bills. Before he began working in the Bureau of Engraving and securities in the U.S. Treasury, Bolden served 16 years in the printing by the CIA.
 William Bolden at work.
William Bolden examining lists of 20 dollar bills. "I am proud to be involved in the creation of what is widely used around the world," he said.
William Bolden, left, and his colleague, Avery Delhert study lists the 20-dollar bills.
Banknotes are packaged in packs of two thousand dollars.
Denominations strong enough to bend and unbend them 4,000 times, only then they can break.
Lydia Washington, a representative of the U.S. Bureau of Engraving and securities in the U.S. Treasury, says that only the Office 1368 employees, and they produce per day can be cuts in the total cost of 974 million dollars. "We have set world standards in the production of currency," she said. "Our currency is very high quality and is not depreciated."


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