Australian ten-dollar note

The people depicted on the paper note issue are architect Francis Greenway, previously a convicted forger, on the obverse along with public buildings he helped construct, and Henry Lawson on the reverse with his poetry and scenes of the outback gold-mining town of Gulgong in the 19th century, including the Times Bakery.

[4] The polymer note, designed by Max Robinson, features Andrew Barton (Banjo) Paterson on the obverse, with a horse from the Snowy Mountains region, and a wattle plant, and his signature.

[5] The $10 note of 2017 retains the themes of the original, with this issue featuring the Bramble Wattle (Acacia victoriae) and the Sulphur-crested Cockatoo (Cacatua galerita).

[6] The obverse design included the sailing ship HMS Supply anchored at Sydney Cove, with the early colony in the background.

Justice Robert French held that the copyright had been validly assigned and that, while Yumbulul may not have fully appreciated the implications of what he was doing in terms of his own cultural obligations, the agent had not engaged in misleading or deceptive conduct.

Raised print and microprinting of the poem The Man from Snowy River and the denomination value are included.

[12][13] The 1988 Commemorative issue includes an optically variable device of Captain James Cook, who first mapped Botany Bay.

1993–2017 polymer note (obverse)
1993–2017 polymer note (reverse)
1988 commemorative polymer note (obverse)
1988 commemorative polymer note (reverse)