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Vintage neon signs

kaiser

A-List Customer
Messages
402
Location
Germany, NRW, HSK
I'm so glad to have given you that info. If you have any from when you owned the house, and feel like it, it would be great to see photos of the tile work. We are renovating a 1928 apartment and both the bathroom and kitchen will have "Sanitary Movement" tile work. We feel like we are giving the apartment back its heritage, its soul as the one still original bathroom has Sanitary Movement tile.
Hi Fading Fast, I will see if I have anything in a couple of boxes of old photos I still have. I doubt it though as I never really took photos in the bathroom. It was very good work that even then reminded me if Doctors offices when I was a kid in the early 60's. That might be a place for you to look as I suspect it would still be possible to find old medical facilities somewhere in New York.
 
Messages
17,197
Location
New York City
Hi Fading Fast, I will see if I have anything in a couple of boxes of old photos I still have. I doubt it though as I never really took photos in the bathroom. It was very good work that even then reminded me if Doctors offices when I was a kid in the early 60's. That might be a place for you to look as I suspect it would still be possible to find old medical facilities somewhere in New York.

You are absolutely right. Doctor's offices and some old schools, too, still have some sanitary tile bathrooms, exam rooms (doctor's offices) and kitchens (schools).
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
Messages
33,732
Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
Sounds quite unusual today, but from what I understand it was a very popular moniker for food establishments and food products back in the 30s and 40s.

As Fading noted, "Sanitary" was everywhere at the time. There was a chain of grocery stores called "Sanitary Food Stores," there were "Sanitary Barber Shops," "Sanitary Hotels," "Sanitary Garages," and on and on. The humble "sanitary napkin" also was a product of that era, and is probably its most enduring commercial legacy.
 
This neon is outside of the Teamsters Local here in Springfield, MO.

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Messages
17,197
Location
New York City
Our oldest existing Firestone store still sports a neon sign.

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Great neon sign and reminds me of going to buy tires with my father in the '70s: the man would negotiate calmly and impassively, but relentlessly, to the point where I thought they'd just give him the tires to get him out of the store (I would have). I haven't owned a car in almost thirty years (live in a big city), but I can't believe that kind of negotiation goes on any more as it seems that we've moved to a "this is the price" model in most businesses.
 
I always negotiate at a swap meet or flea market, but never think to do it at a retail store (other than an auto dealership). It might work.

When my son was 8-years-old he asked how much a pack of Pokémon cards was (they were being sold at the cigarette counter at Wal-Mart). He then asked if he could get two packs for the single quoted price. The older lady behind the counter was so shocked by the haggling that she let him have the two card packs for the price of one. I guess his hanging with me and his Great-Grandpa at weekly swaps taught him a thing or two. :D
 
Messages
17,197
Location
New York City
I always negotiate at a swap meet or flea market, but never think to do it at a retail store (other than an auto dealership). It might work.

When my son was 8-years-old he asked how much a pack of Pokémon cards was (they were being sold at the cigarette counter at Wal-Mart). He then asked if he could get two packs for the single quoted price. The older lady behind the counter was so shocked by the haggling that she let him have the two card packs for the price of one. I guess his hanging with me and his Great-Grandpa at weekly swaps taught him a thing or two. :D

Swap meets - something else my all-purchases-are- "bargainable" father frequented and was quite good at. While I kid a bit, I learned a lot about game theory and negotiating from a man who barely made it out of high school and had no idea what game theory was. I'll take a street smart person any day of the week. I was fortunate to have gone to a state university and learned an incredible amount from my "formal education," but can absolutely say the same about having watched my father navigate through life in our modest town. Sounds like you and your son, also, had a great education-by-example childhood.
 
Messages
13,669
Location
down south
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Fife restaurant, in down town Birmingham, AL. Everybody, and I mean EVERYBODY, around here refers to it as Fife's, although as you can see, there's no S on the sign. Best soul food you can get, outside of Grandma's house.
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