The P#48 series replaced the earlier "brown" $10 signature varieties that had circulated since the late 1970s, with Springer's signature appearing on notes issued during a period of relative monetary stability following the IMF-monitored adjustments of the early 1990s. Barbados had maintained its fixed 2:1 peg to the US dollar since 1975 — a commitment that shaped every printing decision, since note confidence depended entirely on exchange credibility rather than central bank reserve flexibility.
De La Rue's security thread on this series runs as a windowed rather than fully embedded strip, an incremental upgrade over the plain embedded threads of the preceding decade.
The P#48 series replaced the earlier "brown" $10 signature varieties that had circulated since the late 1970s, with Springer's signature appearing on notes issued during a period of relative monetary stability following the IMF-monitored adjustments of the early 1990s. Barbados had maintained its fixed 2:1 peg to the US dollar since 1975 — a commitment that shaped every printing decision, since note confidence depended entirely on exchange credibility rather than central bank reserve flexibility.
De La Rue's security thread on this series runs as a windowed rather than fully embedded strip, an incremental upgrade over the plain embedded threads of the preceding decade.