| Popis líce |
Printed in blue intaglio on white paper, the obverse presents two full-length allegorical figures — a woman (Helena) at left and a man (Paris) at right — flanking the central denomination text and numeral value, all executed in a fine engraved style. The composition is framed by an intricate guilloche border with typeset legends above and below the central vignette. |
| Opis líce |
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| Popis rubu |
Printed entirely in blue intaglio, the reverse carries four allegorical putti arranged in pairs at the left and right, each group associated with emblems of agriculture and the arts. A central oval medallion at the top encloses a classical female portrait bust in profile, framed by a large ornate wreath cartouche at centre, with a decorative floral and fruit garland along the lower border. The engravers' credits — H. HENDRICKX. DEL. INV. and PANNEMAKER-DOMS. SC. — appear in small letterpress text at the lower left and right margins respectively. |
| Opis rubu |
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| Podpisy |
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| Typ ochrany |
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| Popis ochrany |
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| Varianty |
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Pannemaker is the name worth noting here. Adolphe-François Pannemaker was among the most accomplished wood engravers working in Brussels during the second half of the nineteenth century, contributing regularly to illustrated publications before his work crossed into security printing. The involvement of Albert Doms alongside him suggests a division of labor across the note's engraved elements — not uncommon when a single design demanded both fine portraiture and decorative border work at this level of intricacy.
The issue window spanning nearly a decade reflects the National Bank's conservative replacement cycle, not any production shortfall. Henri Hendrickx served the Bank as its primary in-house designer across multiple series during this period.