Interesting how money is similar yet different throughout the world. How centuries ago it was livestock or made goods and now we use printed paper to get these things.
Palacio Central de la Computacion, Havana, Cuba, November 2025 Welcome to One Word Sunday, and over to all of you to join the challenge with your own blue post.To join the challenge, […]
Havana, Cuba, December 2016 Now over to all of you. Do come and join us in our Saturday six-word musings. I’ll admit that many of us openly break the numeric […]
Classic cars, including a glossy Plymouth Special DeLuxe, Havana, Cuba, November 2025 Welcome to One Word Sunday, and over to all of you to join the challenge with your own red post.To […]
Avian flypast, Fernsehturm, Berlin, December 2024 One of my favourite cities is Berlin, and I’m missing it. I often get out there for their Christmas markets but I didn’t make […]
Remember last week’s broken window looking inside to outside? Here’s the same window from outside: A youngster seen from outside, Havana, Cuba, November 2025 Welcome to One Word Sunday, and […]
St Albans Cathedral from Homeland Hill, St Albans, Herts, February 2026 Now over to all of you. Do come and join us in our Saturday six-word musings. I’ll admit that […]
View through broken windows, Havana, Cuba, November 2025 Welcome to One Word Sunday, and over to all of you to join the challenge with your own inside out post.To join the challenge, […]
Great image! Thanks for sharing!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Brilliant! I’ve collected bank notes from around the world – now you’ve given me an idea of how to display them!
My pictures and Linky!
LikeLiked by 1 person
I met a guy you’d get on well with in Muscat, Oman. He had a stall in a market there and had a fantastic collection of banknotes.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Very cool!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Interesting how money is similar yet different throughout the world. How centuries ago it was livestock or made goods and now we use printed paper to get these things.
LikeLiked by 2 people
Yes, and I was just reading that in Croatia, martens were a key predecessor of banknotes. Hence the name of the currency: kuna, meaning marten
LikeLiked by 1 person
Money makes the world goes round. Like your pictures 🙂
Bernhard
LikeLiked by 2 people
Thanks Bernhard
LikeLike