Canadian Bank Note Company
Industry | Printing |
---|---|
Founded | 1897 |
Headquarters | Ottawa, Ontario, Canada |
Key people |
Douglas R. Arends, Chair Ronald G. Arends, President and CEO |
Products | bank notes, passport, tickets, stamps, ID cards |
Website | CBNC |
The Canadian Bank Note Company is a Canadian security printing company. It is probably best known for holding the contract with the Bank of Canada to supply it with Canada's banknotes. The company's other clients include private businesses, national and sub-national governments, central banks, and postal services from around the world. In addition to bank notes, the company produces passports, driver's licences, birth certificates, postage stamps, coupons, and many other security-conscious document-related products. It also prints and provides document reading systems for identification cards, lottery tickets, stamps, and bank notes.
From 1897 until 1923, CBN was a unit of the New York-based American Bank Note Company. It has since been based in Ottawa, Ontario. In October 2006, RR Donnelley completed acquisition of Canadian Bank Note's financial printing business, consisting of documentation for initial public offerings.[1]
In recent months, the Canadian Bank Note Company has been the chief-provider for machine readable passports used within the Caribbean Community bloc of countries. The majority of the new CARICOM passports as they are called serve the union as a centre-piece of promoting easy travel within the Caribbean Single Market and Economy (CSME).[2]
Gallery
Samples of items printed by Canadian Bank Note Company:
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Bank of Canada $1 note, 1935
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Canada 1 cent MacDonald 1927
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Canada 10 cents Windsor Castle 1935
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Canada dollar Champlain 1935
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Canada Hydroelectrique 1946
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Canada George VI 1937
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Canada George VI 1942
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Canada George VI 1950
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Canada Castor 1951
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Canada 5 cents Elizabeth II Karsh
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Canada 5 cents Elizabeth II Wilding
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Canada 5 cents Chasse 1957
See also
References
- ↑ PrintCAN News Archives - September 2006. Printcan.com. Retrieved on 2013-07-26.
- ↑ Archived October 30, 2007 at the Wayback Machine
External links
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