You can see under “Signed” that there are no signatures at this time. To make the first signature, we need to click “Continue to Sign”.

Signing with the first private key of the first wallet address

We enter the first private key and click “Sign”. Now, when we go back to the verify page, we can see that “Signed” has changed to one, indicating one signature. Now it is extremely important to note that the raw transaction is longer because it now contains information about the signature we just did.

The first wallet signature is in place, now time for the second one.

Now we just need to add a second signature and we will be good to go.

The second signature’s private key on the last transaction.

We sign with our second private key, and get another transaction signature (this one is even longer). Here, you could send the new transaction to another party for them to verify and allow for funds to be spent.

All signatures complete and we are ready to broadcast to the rest of the world

Now, we can see two signatures have been applied and the transaction is ready to be broadcasted. You can click the “Broadcast” button to get to the following screen. We verify that everything is correct and click “Broadcast” to sends the transaction off to the Peercoin chain.

Verifying that everything is correct and accurate before we send the transaction off.

It will return a transaction id which you can check on the testnet explorer. You can see mine here: https://testnet-explorer.peercoin.net/tx/34e3f78aa8de0da000c94f2e8af400df25ea7e72f8f4e5146e8258aa4d1d0feb. I sent the Peercoins back to the faucet, but this would be the standard process for doing it live on the mainnet.