View allAll Photos Tagged NeonSign
Neon "park" sign for The Rizik Building (LAZ Parking). 1100 Connecticut Ave NW (seen from L St), Washington, DC.
There has been an arch welcome sign at this location on Mission St in Ketchikan for most of the past 75 years, when it hasn't been knocked down. This latest version was erected in 1996 & was patterned after the 1951 version. This version has a neon salmon & fisherman that move.
Neon signs are for indoor use only. 1 year warranty on all components, two year warranty available for an extra charge.
www.neonandmore.com/neon-signs/other-neon-signs/dry-clean...
Animation Preview:
Marketplace store: marketplace.secondlife.com/stores/188788
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This sign confused me as the building the business is in isn't that old so I called them and asked how old their sign is...it was made in the early 1990's.
March 4, 2011 visit to the Sloan Museum in Flint, Michigan.
Hamady Brothers was a local chain of supermarkets in Flint from 1911 to 1991. One of the brothers noticed the importance of automobiles, so in the 1940s they began building larger supermarkets with abundant parking spaces and neon signs such as this one proudly displaying HAMADY BROS. AUTOMOBILE SHOPPERS.
I was going to go into Fallbrook today, but decided to see what I could find around town to shoot. This is above the box office at our movie theatre .... with some tweaking of curves, levels & saturation. ;)
Electric when you View On Black
An early victim (2000) of the mid-century motel demo craze in the Wildwoods of NJ was the now forgotten Starlite Motel. The sign was saved.
Photographed from an open topped double decker bus during an evening tour of central Las Vegas, Nevada in the USA.
Mong Kok (also spelt Mongkok), is an area in the Yau Tsim Mong District on Kowloon West, Hong Kong. Before the 1994 merger, Mong Kok was part of the Mong Kok District. The Prince Edward area occupies the northern part of Mong Kok.
The district is characterized by a mixture of old and new multi-story buildings, with shops and restaurants at street level and commercial or residential units above. Major industries in Mong Kok are retail, restaurants (including fast food) and entertainment.
With its extremely high population density of 130,000 person per km2 or 340,000 person per mi2, Mongkok was described as the busiest district in the world by the Guinness World Records.