Jump to content

ELECTRIC SIGN SUPPLIES
If You're Looking For Premium Electric Sign Industry Components From Trim Cap, LED's, Neon Supplies, Power Supplies, Pattern Paper.  Then Please Visit Our Online Store or Feel Free To Call Us For Inquiries or Placing an Order!!
Buy Now

SIGN INSTALLER MAP
Looking for a fellow Sign Syndicate Company Member For A Sign Install or Maintenance Call?
Click Here

For Sign Company's Who Work As Subcontractors
Before You Work For A National Sign & Service Company You Need To Look At The Reviews Of These Companies Before You Work For Them. Learn When To Expect Payment From Them and What It's Like To Work For Them, The Good, The Bad, The Ugly. Learn and Share Your Experiences Yourself For Others

Click Here

Color, motion and memories


Erik Sine

Recommended Posts

Color, motion and memories

Cincinnati museum showcases a U.S. "sign garden"

By LISA CORNWELL • THE ASSOCIATED PRESS • March 23, 2008

An old brick building just north of downtown Cincinnati gives little hint outside of the treasury of nostalgic icons within its walls.

Some unlit motel and restaurant signs line the nearby street, and a 20-foot fiberglass genie that advertised the Aladdin Carpeteria carpet cleaning company in 1960s Los Angeles looms near the door. But that doesn't prepare visitors for the burst of color, motion and memories greeting them inside the American Sign Museum.

A tour of the more than 200 signs and other items that include sign makers' tools is a journey through decades of America's evolving cultural taste, technology and commercial design — at times evoking fond remembrances of family road trips.

Vivid pinks, greens and other hues light up the foyer that museum founder and president Tod Swormstedt calls his "Sign Garden" — the appetizer for a sign smorgasbord spanning the late-1800s to the 1970s.

Visitors entering the garden are immediately drawn to a spinning Sputnik replica that welcomed customers in the 1960s to the Satellite Shopland shopping center in Anaheim, Calif. The 6-foot-diameter plastic globe — its metal spikes studded with colored light bulbs — spins near a Dutch Boys Donuts windmill with rotating blue neon blades from 1950s Denver.

Nearby is the multicolored 1950s SkyVu Motel sign that stood along state Route 40 just outside Kansas City, Mo., beckoning travelers with "chasing light bulbs" flashing on and off in sequence as though traveling around the sign. There's also a 1930s United Pentecostal Church sign from Shreveport, La., with its streamlined design, and a 1960s Howard Johnson sign from New York City.

Nostalgia is a key attraction, especially for baby boomers who grew up in the post-World War II years when Americans began taking to the roads for family vacations.

Neon signs from the 1920s through the 1960s are particularly eye-catching, along with elegant hand-painted gold leaf on glass from the late 1800s and 1900s, and the first electric signs of the early 1900s — porcelain-enamel illuminated with light bulbs. Plastic signs that emerged after World War II, hand-lettered show cards advertising Las Vegas casino entertainment and sign salesmen's samples also are featured.

John Jakle, co-author of several books on American roadside history and a professor emeritus of geography and landscape architecture at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, is a fan.

"With the quality of the signs and the depth of understanding and knowledge in the interpretation, it really is a national treasure," Jakle said. "Roadside America is very short-lived, and about the only way Americans are going to be able to remember important eras in landscape history is through museums like this one."

Swormstedt, who spent 26 years working at the Sign of the Times industry trade journal, started his "midlife crisis project" in 1999.

He considered other cities before choosing Cincinnati, where his family has published the trade journal since the early 1900s. The journal's ST Media Group International Inc. parent company has contributed $1.5 million for the not-for-profit museum that opened in 2005.

He has traveled thousands of miles and spent innumerable hours on the Internet assembling the growing collection that also includes about 300 signs awaiting display, 800 books and catalogs, and more than 1,200 photos and slides.

Signs are donated and purchased. Swormstedt hears about them from sign companies and from people seeing the Web site or reports of his sign rescues. He also attends swap meets for gas station memorabilia collectors and shows featuring antique advertising.

"Most museums start with a collection, but I started without a single sign," he said.

The museum's first piece was a box of gold-leaf samples on glass created by noted gold leaf artist Raymond LeBlanc. The first sign Swormstedt acquired was an animated neon welder's sign.

About 2,000 people visit annually. The response has been good enough that the museum will open in a new site late this year or in early 2009. The new property will initially more than triple the current space.

Swormstedt enthusiastically guides visitors on the 1 1/2- to two-hour tour past exhibits including a gas station sign and two pumps from the 1930s, and vintage storefronts filled with pre-neon, neon and post-neon signs.

"I guess signs are in my blood or genes," he jokes.

He stresses the importance of preserving older signs before they disappear as a permanent record of the sign industry's history and its contributions to commerce and the American landscape.

You have enemies? Good. That means you've stood up for something, sometime in your life. - Winston Churchill

Link to comment
Share on other sites



  • Topics

  • Posts

    • It depends on what's under the EIFS.   If it's plywood under the foam, then toggles are fine for a lightweight sign.  If masonry, we've come to like the titen HD (simpson strong tie brand) anchors or long wedge anchors.   The Titen HD screws are more user friendly than tapcons IMO.   They come in a variety of sizes, sometimes even at the big home centers.   Just check to see if it's densglass (fiberglass wall panels) under the foam.  Engineeners have told us that densglass isn't "structural" and that things need to be thru-bolted with uni-strut (or equal) sleepers across studs inside the wall.  A few years back, we were called out for an emergency call where someone had installed some large raceway channel letter signs to an EIFS wall that had densglass behind.  They used lag screws.  These held for a while but a heavy snow caused them to fail.   And toggles should work with Densglass but again not for any heavy loads.    In any case don't compress the foam too much.  A sleeve (mentioned above) would be needed for whatever the depth of the foam might be, though probably not needed for something light like an ACM panel.   if it's a really small sign, then appropriate exterior screws are usually OK going into plywood.  
    • Interested in neon manifold for my personal shop 484 862 6095 ask for Johnny
    • Are there any recommendations for the best types of anchors to use for lightweight signs on EIFS?  <a href=" https://www.phoenixstuccocontractor.com/"> Phoenix Stucco Contractors</a>
    • Hi   Can anyone tell me the right color red and blue translucent vinyl for the "new" Pepsi logo?  We have a local ice cream spot that recently changed from Coke to Pepsi and we have to replace the graphics on a couple of lit cabinets.   The customer sent me the logo in various formats but it didn't specify the correct colors.   I've searched but keep getting CYMK, etc. for the older logo - 2022 or so.   Thanks!
×
  • Create New...