
(Hong Kong notes: some these appear to have been printed by my bank, which I wouldn't trust to produce anything secure or technical...)

(Australian notes: all of which have a see-thru bit and have gone "polymer" meaning they can be recycled into bins and other stuff at the end of their life...)(not my fingers, by the way...)

(Australian coins: which have kangaroos and koalas and echidnas on the one side, but are reassuringly royal on the other...)

(She looks really grumpy, doesn't she...?)
It seems bizarre to come home and find the money is just as foreign...
2ps and pennies seem to be very prevalent already, but haven't seen the rest yet...
...only in the picture.
If you get asked what's on the front on a ten pence piece, you might hesitate then say "Britannia" or "portcullis" or "lion" or something else really random because we're a bit ignorant about something so common which we handle everyday, yet hardly look at.
Of course, what's really on the front of the ten pence piece is the Queen's head, because that's what's on the front of all the coins (something else most of us forget - the front is really the back and the back is really the front...)
That hasn't changed with the new designs, but the answer to what's on the back of the coins will now always be "a bit of shield...", which might make pub quizzes easier, but surely lacks a bit of variety...
comforting to know you haven't changed either... Coins are coins, they are useful and not very interesting! Hong Kong money however is interesting because the notes have more security features than most other currencies and the notes are made by two different banks with several designs in circulation at any one time!! So you may not think it looks trust worthy but it's more trust worthy than most...
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