Great Fundraising Organizations, by Alan Clayton. Book cover.

The feel of money

Howard Lake | 20 October 2009 | Blogs

We all like the feel of money, whether it’s our own or the money that we raise for charitable causes. But have you stopped to think what banknotes are made of?

Hong Kong Dollars
Photo: Refracted Moments on Flickr.com

I had assumed it was some kind of paper, but that is not so. I learned this in an article in Wired UK magazine this month, The Inkjet Counterfeiter by Adam Higginbotham.

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Great Fundraising Organizations, by Alan Clayton. Buy now.

I now know that “UK notes are printed on paper made from a mixture of cotton fibre and linen rag; euro notes are printed on 100 per cent cotton; and US notes are printed on paper composed of 75 per cent cotton and 25 per cent linen, giving it a feel that’s easily distinguished from the smooth wood-pulp paper commonly used in copiers”.

Which would explain, I now realise, why most banknotes can survive an accidental session in a back pocket in the washing machine.

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