Indian New notes

100.00 ₹

Mahi found her younger brother, Shivay, looking at a crisp new ten-rupee note with wide, curious eyes. "Do you know about our new money, Shivay?" she asked with a smile. "It's like a rainbow in your wallet!" "Let's start with this one," Mahi said, pointing to the ten-rupee note. "This is the color of chocolate brown! And see this motif? It's the Sun Temple in Konark, a place full of amazing stone carvings." Next, she pulled out a greenish-yellow twenty-rupee note. "This one makes me think of lemon and mint," she giggled. "On the back are the Ellora Caves, which are ancient temples carved right out of a mountain!" Shivay's eyes lit up. "Ooh, what's that Fluorescent blue one?" he asked, pointing to a fifty-rupee note. "That's the fifty-rupee note! It's the colour of the sky on a clear day," Mahi explained. "And this is a stone chariot from Hampi, a city of ancient ruins and big, round boulders." "Wow!" said Shivay. "What about the purple one?" Mahi then showed him the one-hundred-rupee note. "This lavender-coloured note has a picture of Rani ki Vav, a beautiful ancient stepwell in Gujarat. It's like a palace underground!" "And for two hundred rupees, we have this bright yellow note, the colour of sunshine!" Mahi continued. "It shows the Sanchi Stupa, a very old and important Buddhist monument." "The five-hundred-rupee note is stone grey," Mahi said, showing him the next one. "On the back is the Red Fort in Delhi, where the Prime Minister gives a speech on Independence Day!" "There used to be a Magenta two-thousand-rupee note with a picture of our Mars mission, Mangalyaan," Mahi explained. "But the Reserve Bank of India said we don't need it anymore, so it's not used now." Shivay beamed. "Wow, Didi! Our money is like a history and travel book! I want to see all those places someday." Mahi hugged him, "I'm so glad you think so, Shivay! Maybe we will."