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Notary Rotary

Colorado Notary Seal Stamp - Pre-inked Brother
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We believe the Brother 2260 pre-inked notary stamp is the best money can buy

Featuring an ultra-crisp impression with no bleed-through, the Brother will yield up to 50,000 impressions when properly re-inked

When one of our business partners asked us to carry the Brother line, we were both skeptical and reluctant. Our skepticism stemmed from the fact that the stamps can be made fairly quickly - often in as little as 10 minutes from start-to-finish, in fact - which had us thinking they had to be cheap. Our reluctance was due to the very high price of parts, as well as the fact that you cannot make more than 1 stamp at a time. (Brother materials range from 2 - 4x as expensive as other stamps and the Brother stamp machine can only accommodate one.)

However, after seeing the impressions first-hand, we were sold. The Brother imprints are extremely crisp and, unlike many other pre-inked stamps, bleed is virtually non-existent, even after several weeks. So, we promptly ordered our first machine.

The Brother, like most pre-inked stamps, can be re-inked to yield additional impressions. If your stamp impression ever fades, simply remove the cap and add the appropriate number of Brother ink drops.

IMPORTANT: Re-inking with any other brand of ink will ruin your stamp, so please do not do this.


What does the law say about the Colorado Notary Stamp?
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Colorado Notary Handbook
VIII. Notarial Certificate or Notarization
…The notary’s seal, either embossed or rubber-stamped. The seal must be just as described in [12-55-112 (2) C.R.S.]. A notary should not use any seal until s/he has personally checked it against both the commission certificate and the 112 (2) requirements.

Seals are manufactured and sold by private companies, not by the state. The manufacturer may not be familiar with Colorado’s seal requirements, and may not have seen the notary’s commission certificate. A notary’s name, or some other word may be misspelled, or there may be unauthorized additions to the seal. Have any mistakes corrected before using the seal.

(Note: Colorado law does not have any size, shape, or color of ink restrictions for notary seals, but consider your clients and the public at large before deciding on a size too small to read, a bizarre color or shape, or any other unusual variant. Also, the law has no preference for one type of seal over the other. Some notaries prefer an embosser because it is traditional and better accepted by some clients, or because it is harder to reproduce, and copies do not look like originals. Some prefer a rubber stamp because copies do look like originals, and the seal is easy to read in the copy without being rubbed with the side of a pencil lead or otherwise “raised.”)...


Colorado Notary Law
12-55-112. Official signature - rubber stamp seal - seal embosser - notary's electronic signature.
  1. Under or near such notary's official signature on every notary certificate, a notary public shall rubber stamp or emboss clearly and legibly such notary's official seal. The official notary seal shall contain only the outline of the seal, the name of the notary, exactly as such notary writes his or her official signature, the words STATE OF COLORADO, and the words "NOTARY PUBLIC".
  2. Under or near such notary's official signature on every notary certificate, a notary public shall write or stamp "my commission expires (commission expiration date)".
  3. Every notary public may provide, keep, and use a seal embosser engraved to show such notary's name and the words NOTARY PUBLIC and "STATE OF COLORADO". The indenta- tions made by the seal embosser shall not be applied on the document where the notary certificate appears in a manner that will render illegible or incapable of photographic reproduction any of the printed marks or writing.


12-55-113. Lost journal or official seal.
Every notary public shall send or have delivered notice to the secretary of state within thirty days after the notary loses or misplaces such notary's journal of notarial acts, or official seal, or the notary becomes aware that any other person has electronic control of his or her electronic signature. The fee payable to the secretary of state for recording notice of a lost journal, or seal, or that another person has electronic control of a notary's electronic signature shall be determined and collected pursuant to section 24-21-104 (3), C.R.S.


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