Somebody was obviously dipping into the good drugs.
Oh, I thought it said Paramours.
@2
Thanks!
@5 – I’m so glad I’m not the only one!
Dan! Dan! Don’t go in! She’s a witch and she plans to eat you!
PA2E MOUBS SUNRISE to SUNSEW
I think it has to be actually legible for it to count as a font. Not sure on that one, though.
Everything should be in Comic Sans and bright blue.
I think what we have here is an overzealous park employee running a too-full paint roller over a perfectly good sign.
grep -i ‘^p[ao]r[bdeghkmnoqsuwxz]$’ /usr/share/dict/words
park
pare
pars
pore
pork
porn
<nerdly giggle>
it’s peeling paint/vinyl… 🙂
I really like that. There’s something pleasant about these letters. If it had been printed white on brown instead of the opposite, the erosion would cause the letters’ edges to peel up and become skeletons, but now they spread out and become thick and juicy, as the background (or what we perceive to be the background) peels up.
Eventually all the brown will fall off and the whole sign will be letters. This process strikes me as a more acceptable death for the sign. More than the letters falling off individually, which is how most signs die.
I can’t even make out the first word…
Porn hours? Pass hours? Huh?
Park Hours
Sunrise to Sunset
Recession Extra Black
Somebody was obviously dipping into the good drugs.
Oh, I thought it said Paramours.
@2
Thanks!
@5 – I’m so glad I’m not the only one!
Dan! Dan! Don’t go in! She’s a witch and she plans to eat you!
PA2E MOUBS SUNRISE to SUNSEW
I think it has to be actually legible for it to count as a font. Not sure on that one, though.
Everything should be in Comic Sans and bright blue.
I think what we have here is an overzealous park employee running a too-full paint roller over a perfectly good sign.
grep -i ‘^p[ao]r[bdeghkmnoqsuwxz]$’ /usr/share/dict/words
park
pare
pars
pore
pork
porn
<nerdly giggle>
it’s peeling paint/vinyl… 🙂
I really like that. There’s something pleasant about these letters. If it had been printed white on brown instead of the opposite, the erosion would cause the letters’ edges to peel up and become skeletons, but now they spread out and become thick and juicy, as the background (or what we perceive to be the background) peels up.
Eventually all the brown will fall off and the whole sign will be letters. This process strikes me as a more acceptable death for the sign. More than the letters falling off individually, which is how most signs die.