“You are motoring down a two line,
back country road when you happen to notice a faded, slightly rusty sign
hanging on a dilapidated weather worn barn.
It is a ‘tin sign’ heralding the virtues of a product from a by-gone
era. While they are all but gone today,
these tin signs were the icons of advertising ‘back in the day’. Colorful, concise, and most of all durable, these classy bits of
advertisement dotted the landscape from New York
to Los Angeles.
Tin signs sang the praises of
everything from soap to soda. Less
intrusive and often quite inventive, tin signs were the ultimate in soft
sell. Unlike their flashy cousins the
billboards, tin signs were almost subliminal in their delivery. They were so common that they seemed to blend
into the countryside almost as though they were a natural part of the
landscape. Yet if you looked closely at home movies and snapshots taken along
route 66 and other highways, you were sure to see one of these mini ads in the
background.
Like the neon signs found today in
liquor stores, the tin signs of yesteryear where either given to the grocery
store owner free or, often, a small payment was made to the farmer or store
owner that would put up the sign. Often
the competition for advertising space would get fierce especially if a
prestigious or high traffic location was up for grabs. Some manufactures wanted exclusive rights to
a wall (i.e. no competitor’s tin signs) while others simply placed their signs
wherever they could get permission.
More than just an advertising
gimmick, tin signs were also used during World War II to convey patriotism. The Norman Rockwell depiction of ‘Uncle Sam’
with his finger pointing out of the sign stating ‘Uncle Sam Want You!’ is now a cultural
icon. Rosie the Riveter was a popular tin sign found on the outside walls of
defense plants, while signs asking the public to collect scrap metal and paper
or to buy ‘War Bonds’ could be found on almost every building.
Not only did tin signs have a
practical function but, in many cases, they were in of themselves works of
art. It was not unusual to find a Norman
Rockwell or a Grant Wood painting fatefully reproduced as a method to promote
Coca-Cola or John Deere Tractors. It was
also not uncommon to find your favorite movie star such a Marilyn Monroe (a
favorite subject for tin signs) selling Luster Crème Shampoo or James Dean hawking ‘Kist Kola’.
With the advent of television, the
tin sign as a form of advertising began to slowly fade into history. Now original copies of these signs can go for
hundreds of dollars to collectors. With
the resurgence of nostalgic decorating, tin sign replicas have become a very
popular glimpse into the past.
These facsimiles have been
fatefully reproduced to bring back an appreciation of a time long gone; when
the world moved at a much slower pace and people actually had the time to stop
and look at a tiny sign up on the side of a barn, out in the middle of nowhere.