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1 Dollar gold plated

Issuer United States
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Currency Dollar (1785-date)
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Obverse description Fantasy novelty piece modelled on the US Federal Reserve Note format, with gold-deposited polymer substrate reproducing the standard one-dollar vignette layout. The obverse bears a central portrait medallion in the manner of the George Washington likeness, framed by guilloche underprint elements. Denomination numerals and inscriptional legends appear in the customary positions of the standard issue.
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Reverse description The reverse replicates the Great Seal vignette arrangement of the standard US one-dollar note on a gold-deposited polymer surface, with the eagle and pyramid devices occupying their conventional lateral positions. Ornamental guilloche borders frame the central field, and denomination text is positioned in the standard layout.
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Comments

This is not a legal tender banknote and has no issuing authority behind it. "Gold-deposited polymer" describes a novelty product — typically a base polymer substrate with a thin metallic coating applied commercially, produced for the souvenir and gift market. The United States has never issued polymer currency of any kind, and no Federal Reserve or Treasury instrument of this description exists.

Nothing about this item's production, circulation, or monetary history warrants a catalog entry in a numismatic context.

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