A closer look will reveal the words
ARTIFICIAL TEETH
???? 10 till 7
10 till 2 Saturday
I wonder why they'd chosen the word ''artificial'' instead of ''false'' - I suppose it might have been following the expression ''artificial limb.'' After all, we wouldn't dream of calling a prosthesis, say, a fake leg, we'd simply call it an artificial leg.
This faded sign is just 50, 60 yards up Blackheath Road, where the Taylor & Sons sign remains.
-0-
Perhaps some of our road markings could also be classed as faded signs. They certainly can be as fascinating and undecipherable. Here's a landing strip for a Vertical Take Off and Landing Bicycle. It's a bit small so it would require a very skilled bicycle pilot to get both wheels in the box. (Apparently, because it's surrounded by a continuous line it would be illegal to cycle into it.)
Its main function, of course, is simply to accustom drivers to ignore bike lanes and routinely drive over them.
Seriously though, I've no idea what the point of them is. And I'd lay odds that drivers won't know either.
-0-
Finally, just because I was passing, here's the Beerseller's Asylum on Nunhead Green. I saw the name on the old Stanford map and the very idea of it has made me smile every since. It's between the Nun's Head and the Pyrotechnic's Arms.
2 comments:
Beerseller's Asylum? Publican's Refuge? Victualler's Sanctuary? More info please!
All I know, Curious, is that I'd noticed the Beersellers Asylum on an old map (http://www.mappalondon.com/london/south-east/nunhead.jpg) and today I happened to be cycling past the building with a camera. I really don't know anything more apart from the rather obvious observation that it's hard to imagine the same kind of thing happening nowadays. Youngs retirement home for dray horses? not even that...
Post a Comment