1898_Early_Mount_Wilson_Hotel_California_Los_Angeles_Co_Antique_Photo_Sign_01_ma

1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign

1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign

1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
Approximate size: 4.25 inches x 3.25 inches. In my research, I couldn’t find any other photos of a pre-1905 Mount Wilson Hotel photo, so it’s possible that this is the only one left. Certainly the only one on the open market currently. I was not able to find any others on the open market going back a number of years. On the advertisement sign on the side of the hotel, it reads. The riders obscure the rest of the words. The person pictured on the left is named Bob, the brother of the original owner of this photo, and another person in the photo is named Marshall Dill, a friend of his. It’s theoretically plausible that it’s the same foundation or same spot. It’s also plausible that the 1905 hotel was the same building as the 1898 hotel, but expanded. The first reference photo (the first of the last two images in this listing) is of a postcard of the middling hotel in 1909. Although the three hotels possibly aren’t the same building (certainly not the second and third, because the second burned down), it’s helpful to know the history of the hotel(s) in the area. The middling-timeframe hotel was constructed around 1905 to accommodate visitors to Mount Wilson. It stood as a one-story building with additional cottages for overnight guests. Unfortunately, this first hotel met a fiery fate in 1913 when it burned down. Following the fire, a third Mount Wilson Hotel was erected in 1915. This hotel became a landmark, gracing the mountain for fifty years until its demolition in 1966. The Mount Wilson Hotel Company owned an impressive 1050 acres of land surrounding Mount Wilson, extending approximately one mile in each direction from the hotel. Visitors could explore the nearby observatory and indulge in recreational activities like hiking, sledding, and skiing. Wildlife, including deer, birds, and squirrels, added to the natural allure of the area. Mount Wilson is renowned for housing the historic Mount Wilson Observatory. Notably, a 60-inch telescope was completed at the summit in 1908, and a 150-foot Solar Tower graced the landscape in 1910. The observatory played a pivotal role in astronomical research and observation in Southern California. The mountain bears the name of Benjamin D. Wilson, originally hailing from Tennessee, made his way to California in 1841. In 1864, he blazed the first modern trail to the summit of Mount Wilson in the San Gabriel Mountains, a trail still known as the Mount Wilson Trail. Regarding the history of Mount Wilson overall. In 1889, Professor William Pickering of Harvard University, along with telescope-maker Alvan Clark, prepared an experiment with 4-and-13-inch (102 and 330 mm) telescopes at Mount Wilson. University students would operate the telescopes for nighttime viewing, but more often than not they would log in “bad weather, no visibility” and head to town to relieve their boredom. The small observatory was abandoned with plans to build a larger one at a later date. In 1891, Thaddeus S. Lowe incorporated the Pasadena & Mount Wilson Railroad with the plan of building a scenic mountain railroad to the summit of Mt. At the same time, land and easement disputes between camp owners Steils and Strain were going on over the public and private use of the Mount Wilson Trail. The courts ruled that the trail was a public thoroughfare and that any blockading would be illegal. At the foot of the mountain, a local contractor Thomas Banbury built a 10 mi roadway to be named “The New Mount Wilson Trail, ” now the Mount Wilson Toll Road. Walter Raymond, of Raymond & Whitcomb Travel Agency, Boston, and owner of the Raymond Hotel, Pasadena, offered to pay for rail from New York. Lowe offered to take the lenses up via his yet-to-be-built Mt. The lenses ended up at Yerkes Observatory in Wisconsin, and Lowe’s railway ended up going to Oak Mountain (Mount Lowe). By 1901, The Mount Wilson Toll Road Co. In 1903, George Ellery Hale visited Mt. Wilson and was impressed by the perfect conditions for which to set up the observatory, which would become the Mount Wilson Solar Observatory in 1904. In 1926, Albert Abraham Michelson made what was then the most precise calculation of the speed of light at the time by measuring the round-trip travel time of light between Mount Wilson and Mount San Antonio 22 miles away. Please inspect the pictures, as they give the best representation of condition. There are creased corners, wear, and light discoloration to the photo, relatively normal for its age.
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
ACSC_Azusa_Los_Angeles_San_Bernardino_highway_sign_California_US_Route_66_21x14_01_lzyc

ACSC Azusa Los Angeles San Bernardino highway sign California US Route 66 21×14

ACSC Azusa Los Angeles San Bernardino highway sign California US Route 66 21x14
ACSC Azusa Los Angeles San Bernardino highway sign California US Route 66 21x14

ACSC Azusa Los Angeles San Bernardino highway sign California US Route 66 21x14
To maximize the chances your package will arrive before Christmas, please order BEFORE November 24. Azusa and Los Angeles guide sign. Up for sale today is this Azusa, Los Angeles, Claremont, San Bernardino guide sign. Made to the exact standards as used from 1929 to 1934 by the Auto Club of Southern California. This guide sign was posted in Glendora, at the junction of Foothill Boulevard (US highway 66) and Glendora Boulevard, as seen in the original image. Please see my other auctions for the cross-road sign, pointing to Glendora and Covina. The original of this guide sign, complete with the logo of the Automobile Club of Southern California, would cost many thousands of dollars – if it even survives! Only historic photos of it are known. This is a faithful remake to just over one-half the correct size in each dimension: 21 x 14 inches instead of 36 x 24. It is manufactured on heavy steel with the correct layout, fonts and colors. It weighs about 7 pounds, 8 ounces. It is a high quality, heavy steel sign. Accept no imitations that may be one-third this price, but are one-tenth the quality. No cheap tin to be found here, with the wrong fonts, layouts, size, shape, or any other manner of embarrassing imperfection. This one will make even the most discerning collector stick their nose into the sign, as it looks that good from that close! Would you like a number not seen here? Or perhaps a different style? I can of course make these signs with any city name of your choice, and not just this style, but older and newer ones, and even the classic mileage, direction, and route shield signs from the era. Anything you would like, made with unsurpassed quality right here in the good old US of A.
ACSC Azusa Los Angeles San Bernardino highway sign California US Route 66 21x14
California_San_Bernardino_Santa_Ana_Freeways_sign_US_99_101_Los_Angeles_24x6_01_bgmq

California San Bernardino Santa Ana Freeways sign US 99 101 Los Angeles 24×6

California San Bernardino Santa Ana Freeways sign US 99 101 Los Angeles 24x6
California San Bernardino Santa Ana Freeways sign US 99 101 Los Angeles 24x6

California San Bernardino Santa Ana Freeways sign US 99 101 Los Angeles 24x6
San Bernardino – Santa Ana Freeways guide sign. Up for sale today is this California freeway guide sign for the southbound San Bernardino and Santa Ana Freeways, which at the time carried US 99 and US 101. This sign is taken from the interchange with the US-6 Harbor freeway. Made to the exact 1958 state standards, as used by the state of California on its early freeways. They were clearly still figuring things out… Note the black background! An original of these is very difficult to find; it is very unlikely to have survived very long after its replacement. Not only that, but if it did, it would be a herculean effort to transport; the original of this sign would have been forty feet wide, so we’ve scaled it down for more wieldy display. Here is your chance to own an excellent display piece, without chancing a hernia. The sign is flat printed on steel, with completely accurate layout and fonts. It weighs about 3 lb. And is 24 by 6 inches. If you would like a different size, please do not hesitate to inquire. This is a high quality, heavy steel, non-reflective sign – perfect for indoor or outdoor display. Accept no imitations that may be one-third this price, but are one-tenth the quality. No cheap tin to be found here, with the wrong fonts, layouts, size, shape, or any other manner of embarrassing imperfection. This one will make even the most discerning collector stick their nose into the sign, as it looks that good from that close! I can of course make these signs with any destinations of your choice, and not just this style, but older and newer ones, and even the classic mileage, direction, and city limit guide signs from bygone eras. Anything you would like, made with unsurpassed quality right here in the good old US of A. Figure about 5 lb. The watermark and bear logo in the design preview will not appear on the actual sign. We have begun adding a watermark because we have had problems with other companies copying our artwork to make lesser-quality imitations. You will only get this high level of quality in design and materials from Signs by Jake. Life doesn’t happen along the interstates. It’s against the law.
California San Bernardino Santa Ana Freeways sign US 99 101 Los Angeles 24x6
California_state_route_39_Huntington_Beach_La_Habra_Azusa_marker_road_sign_23x25_01_pcyn

California state route 39 Huntington Beach La Habra Azusa marker road sign 23×25

California state route 39 Huntington Beach La Habra Azusa marker road sign 23x25
California state route 39 Huntington Beach La Habra Azusa marker road sign 23x25

California state route 39 Huntington Beach La Habra Azusa marker road sign 23x25
To maximize the chances your package will arrive before Christmas, please order BEFORE November 24. California State Route 39 sign. Up for sale today is this California state route 39 route sign. Made to the exact 1964 standard from when California switched from white miner’s spade route markers to green ones. An updated version of this shield is still in use to the present day on this famous highway. Take this opportunity to show your love for California and own a piece of roadside history all in one! This state route currently exists in segments, due to a massive mud and rockslide in 1978. The segments cover portions of Orange County and Los Angeles County. The Orange County section runs from the Pacific Coast Highway (State Route 1) in Huntington Beach to Whittier Avenue in La Habra. The Los Angeles County section runs from its intersection with Interstate 10 in West Covina to its junction with State Route 2 in the Angeles National Forest. I can, of course, make this sign with any route or destination of your choice. Here is your chance to own a beautiful sign commemorating all the fun you and your loved ones have had along this lovely route, without breaking the bank. An original of these is very rare to find scrapped; most still enjoy their active service along the roads of California. I can make any destination sign; inquire about your home town! The sign is flat printed on steel, with completely accurate layout and fonts. It weighs about 12 lb. And is 23 by 25 inches. If you would like a different size, city name, or route number, please do not hesitate to inquire. This is a high quality, heavy steel, non-reflective sign – perfect for indoor or outdoor display, with great gloss to replicate the old-school porcelain look. Accept no imitations that may be one-third this price, but are one-tenth the quality. No cheap tin to be found here, with the wrong fonts, layouts, size, shape, or any other manner of embarrassing imperfection. This one will make even the most discerning collector stick their nose into the sign, as it looks that good from that close! I can of course make these signs with any route number of your choice, and not just this style, but older and newer ones, and even the classic mileage, direction, and city limit guide signs from bygone eras. Anything you would like, made with unsurpassed quality right here in the good old US of A, packed with care, and mailed from zip code 61833. Life doesn’t happen along the interstates. It’s against the law. Please note: The watermark and bear logo in the design preview will not appear on the actual sign. We have begun adding a watermark because we have had problems with other companies copying our artwork to make lesser-quality imitations. You will only get this high level of quality in design and materials from Signs by Jake.
California state route 39 Huntington Beach La Habra Azusa marker road sign 23x25
1898_Early_Mount_Wilson_Hotel_California_Los_Angeles_Co_Antique_Photo_Sign_01_hi

1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign

1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign

1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
Approximate size: 4.25 inches x 3.25 inches. In my research, I couldn’t find any other photos of a pre-1905 Mount Wilson Hotel photo, so it’s possible that this is the only one left. Certainly the only one on the open market currently. I was not able to find any others on the open market going back a number of years. On the advertisement sign on the side of the hotel, it reads. The riders obscure the rest of the words. The person pictured on the left is named Bob, the brother of the original owner of this photo, and another person in the photo is named Marshall Dill, a friend of his. It’s theoretically plausible that it’s the same foundation or same spot. It’s also plausible that the 1905 hotel was the same building as the 1898 hotel, but expanded. The first reference photo (the first of the last two images in this listing) is of a postcard of the middling hotel in 1909. Although the three hotels possibly aren’t the same building (certainly not the second and third, because the second burned down), it’s helpful to know the history of the hotel(s) in the area. The middling-timeframe hotel was constructed around 1905 to accommodate visitors to Mount Wilson. It stood as a one-story building with additional cottages for overnight guests. Unfortunately, this first hotel met a fiery fate in 1913 when it burned down. Following the fire, a third Mount Wilson Hotel was erected in 1915. This hotel became a landmark, gracing the mountain for fifty years until its demolition in 1966. The Mount Wilson Hotel Company owned an impressive 1050 acres of land surrounding Mount Wilson, extending approximately one mile in each direction from the hotel. Visitors could explore the nearby observatory and indulge in recreational activities like hiking, sledding, and skiing. Wildlife, including deer, birds, and squirrels, added to the natural allure of the area. Mount Wilson is renowned for housing the historic Mount Wilson Observatory. Notably, a 60-inch telescope was completed at the summit in 1908, and a 150-foot Solar Tower graced the landscape in 1910. The observatory played a pivotal role in astronomical research and observation in Southern California. The mountain bears the name of Benjamin D. Wilson, originally hailing from Tennessee, made his way to California in 1841. In 1864, he blazed the first modern trail to the summit of Mount Wilson in the San Gabriel Mountains, a trail still known as the Mount Wilson Trail. Regarding the history of Mount Wilson overall. In 1889, Professor William Pickering of Harvard University, along with telescope-maker Alvan Clark, prepared an experiment with 4-and-13-inch (102 and 330 mm) telescopes at Mount Wilson. University students would operate the telescopes for nighttime viewing, but more often than not they would log in “bad weather, no visibility” and head to town to relieve their boredom. The small observatory was abandoned with plans to build a larger one at a later date. In 1891, Thaddeus S. Lowe incorporated the Pasadena & Mount Wilson Railroad with the plan of building a scenic mountain railroad to the summit of Mt. At the same time, land and easement disputes between camp owners Steils and Strain were going on over the public and private use of the Mount Wilson Trail. The courts ruled that the trail was a public thoroughfare and that any blockading would be illegal. At the foot of the mountain, a local contractor Thomas Banbury built a 10 mi roadway to be named “The New Mount Wilson Trail, ” now the Mount Wilson Toll Road. Walter Raymond, of Raymond & Whitcomb Travel Agency, Boston, and owner of the Raymond Hotel, Pasadena, offered to pay for rail from New York. Lowe offered to take the lenses up via his yet-to-be-built Mt. The lenses ended up at Yerkes Observatory in Wisconsin, and Lowe’s railway ended up going to Oak Mountain (Mount Lowe). By 1901, The Mount Wilson Toll Road Co. In 1903, George Ellery Hale visited Mt. Wilson and was impressed by the perfect conditions for which to set up the observatory, which would become the Mount Wilson Solar Observatory in 1904. In 1926, Albert Abraham Michelson made what was then the most precise calculation of the speed of light at the time by measuring the round-trip travel time of light between Mount Wilson and Mount San Antonio 22 miles away. Please inspect the pictures, as they give the best representation of condition. There are creased corners, wear, and light discoloration to the photo, relatively normal for its age.
1898 Early Mount Wilson Hotel California Los Angeles Co. Antique Photo Sign
No_Trespassing_Loitering_Forbidden_By_Law_VTG_SIGN_Los_Angeles_Municipal_Code_01_eg

No Trespassing Loitering Forbidden By Law VTG SIGN, Los Angeles Municipal Code

No Trespassing Loitering Forbidden By Law VTG SIGN, Los Angeles Municipal Code
No Trespassing Loitering Forbidden By Law VTG SIGN, Los Angeles Municipal Code
No Trespassing Loitering Forbidden By Law VTG SIGN, Los Angeles Municipal Code
No Trespassing Loitering Forbidden By Law VTG SIGN, Los Angeles Municipal Code
No Trespassing Loitering Forbidden By Law VTG SIGN, Los Angeles Municipal Code
No Trespassing Loitering Forbidden By Law VTG SIGN, Los Angeles Municipal Code
No Trespassing Loitering Forbidden By Law VTG SIGN, Los Angeles Municipal Code
No Trespassing Loitering Forbidden By Law VTG SIGN, Los Angeles Municipal Code
No Trespassing Loitering Forbidden By Law VTG SIGN, Los Angeles Municipal Code
No Trespassing Loitering Forbidden By Law VTG SIGN, Los Angeles Municipal Code
No Trespassing Loitering Forbidden By Law VTG SIGN, Los Angeles Municipal Code

No Trespassing Loitering Forbidden By Law VTG SIGN, Los Angeles Municipal Code
This is a steel one-sided municipal sign measuring just under 14″ Wide and 9″ High. It is not a reproduction. It bears the ghost marks on the rear from where it hung in the Los Angeles area. Is abbreviation for Los Angeles Municipal Code. An online search of the Los Angeles Municipal Code confirms the statute still being applicable SEC. A great four-hole version of this very recognizable sign from Los Angeles County.
No Trespassing Loitering Forbidden By Law VTG SIGN, Los Angeles Municipal Code
California_San_Bernardino_Santa_Ana_Freeways_sign_US_99_101_Los_Angeles_36x9_01_vh

California San Bernardino Santa Ana Freeways sign US 99 101 Los Angeles 36×9

California San Bernardino Santa Ana Freeways sign US 99 101 Los Angeles 36x9
California San Bernardino Santa Ana Freeways sign US 99 101 Los Angeles 36x9

California San Bernardino Santa Ana Freeways sign US 99 101 Los Angeles 36x9
San Bernardino – Santa Ana Freeways guide sign. Up for sale today is this California freeway guide sign for the southbound San Bernardino and Santa Ana Freeways, which at the time carried US 99 and US 101. This sign is taken from the interchange with the US-6 Harbor freeway. Made to the exact 1958 state standards, as used by the state of California on its early freeways. They were clearly still figuring things out… Note the black background! An original of these is very difficult to find; it is very unlikely to have survived very long after its replacement. Not only that, but if it did, it would be a herculean effort to transport; the original of this sign would have been forty feet wide, so we’ve scaled it down for more wieldy display. Here is your chance to own an excellent display piece, without chancing a hernia. The sign is flat printed on steel, with completely accurate layout and fonts. It weighs about 8 lb. And is 36 by 9 inches. If you would like a different size, please do not hesitate to inquire. This is a high quality, heavy steel, non-reflective sign – perfect for indoor or outdoor display. Accept no imitations that may be one-third this price, but are one-tenth the quality. No cheap tin to be found here, with the wrong fonts, layouts, size, shape, or any other manner of embarrassing imperfection. This one will make even the most discerning collector stick their nose into the sign, as it looks that good from that close! I can of course make these signs with any destinations of your choice, and not just this style, but older and newer ones, and even the classic mileage, direction, and city limit guide signs from bygone eras. Anything you would like, made with unsurpassed quality right here in the good old US of A. Figure about 10 lb. The watermark and bear logo in the design preview will not appear on the actual sign. We have begun adding a watermark because we have had problems with other companies copying our artwork to make lesser-quality imitations. You will only get this high level of quality in design and materials from Signs by Jake. Life doesn’t happen along the interstates. It’s against the law.
California San Bernardino Santa Ana Freeways sign US 99 101 Los Angeles 36x9
NO_TRESPASSING_Los_Angeles_Water_Power_Porcelain_Enamel_Sign_22x13_01_cm

NO TRESPASSING Los Angeles Water & Power Porcelain Enamel Sign 22×13

NO TRESPASSING Los Angeles Water & Power Porcelain Enamel Sign 22x13
NO TRESPASSING Los Angeles Water & Power Porcelain Enamel Sign 22x13
NO TRESPASSING Los Angeles Water & Power Porcelain Enamel Sign 22x13
NO TRESPASSING Los Angeles Water & Power Porcelain Enamel Sign 22x13
NO TRESPASSING Los Angeles Water & Power Porcelain Enamel Sign 22x13
NO TRESPASSING Los Angeles Water & Power Porcelain Enamel Sign 22x13
NO TRESPASSING Los Angeles Water & Power Porcelain Enamel Sign 22x13
NO TRESPASSING Los Angeles Water & Power Porcelain Enamel Sign 22x13
NO TRESPASSING Los Angeles Water & Power Porcelain Enamel Sign 22x13
NO TRESPASSING Los Angeles Water & Power Porcelain Enamel Sign 22x13

NO TRESPASSING Los Angeles Water & Power Porcelain Enamel Sign 22x13
Old No Trespassing Porcelain Sign. Original Los Angeles Water & Power, Vintage, No Trespassing Porcelain Enamel Sign 22″x13″. Original Los Angeles County. OWENS VALLEY water Aqueduct – South. Water & Power Flood Control District. Vintage No Trespassing Sign. Measures 22″x13″ – Heavy. Nice Patina, Yes its been shot!
NO TRESPASSING Los Angeles Water & Power Porcelain Enamel Sign 22x13
Los_Angeles_California_county_line_highway_road_sign_green_freeway_1959_45x15_01_rskw

Los Angeles California county line highway road sign green freeway 1959 45×15

Los Angeles California county line highway road sign green freeway 1959 45x15

Los Angeles California county line highway road sign green freeway 1959 45x15
To maximize the chances your package will arrive before Christmas, please order BEFORE November 24. Los Angeles County Line highway sign. Up for sale today is this Los Angeles County Line. Made to the exact state standard used from 1959 to the present day. The 1959 standard changed the background color from black to green on these classic California signs – one of the longest styles in continuous service. A n original of these is not only very rare to find scrapped, but is a herculean effort to transport; furthermore, they enjoy their active service on the highways of California. So here is your chance to own an excellent display piece, without chancing legal trouble… The sign is flat printed on heavy gauge steel, with completely accurate layout and fonts. It weighs about 16 pounds, 12 ounces. The signs in use in the field are much more colossal – this one is a precise rescaling of the freeway style sign down to a much more manageable 45 x 15 inch size. It is a non-reflective sign – perfect for ordinary display, indoors or outdoors. If you would like a larger size version, please ask as I can certainly make one! This is a high quality, heavy steel sign. Accept no imitations that may be one-third this price, but are one-tenth the quality. No cheap tin to be found here, with the wrong fonts, layouts, size, shape, or any other manner of embarrassing imperfection. This one will make even the most discerning collector stick their nose into the sign, as it looks that good from that close! I can of course make these signs with any route number of your choice, and not just this style, but older and newer ones, and even the classic mileage, direction, and city limit guide signs from bygone eras. Anything you would like, made with unsurpassed quality right here in the good old US of A. Life doesn’t happen along the interstates. It’s against the law.
Los Angeles California county line highway road sign green freeway 1959 45x15