Pakistan's first domestic currency issue came with significant constraints — the country had inherited printing infrastructure and note designs from British India, and early rupee notes were necessarily outsourced to established British security printers while local capacity was built. Bradbury Wilkinson, based in New Malden, had long experience with colonial and post-colonial currency contracts across Asia and Africa, and their involvement here reflects that continuity rather than any particular design commission.
The P#4 is the first 1 Rupee note issued under the Government of Pakistan designation, distinct from the transitional Reserve Bank of India notes overprinted for Pakistani use in 1947–48. That distinction matters for date collectors: earlier Pakistani rupees carry an RBI lineage; this one does not.
Pakistan's first domestic currency issue came with significant constraints — the country had inherited printing infrastructure and note designs from British India, and early rupee notes were necessarily outsourced to established British security printers while local capacity was built. Bradbury Wilkinson, based in New Malden, had long experience with colonial and post-colonial currency contracts across Asia and Africa, and their involvement here reflects that continuity rather than any particular design commission.
The P#4 is the first 1 Rupee note issued under the Government of Pakistan designation, distinct from the transitional Reserve Bank of India notes overprinted for Pakistani use in 1947–48. That distinction matters for date collectors: earlier Pakistani rupees carry an RBI lineage; this one does not.