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Sign o' the Times
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Neon alters language, its
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gaseous glow elevating dull verbs (EAT), bland nouns (HOTEL), and vapid
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antonyms (VACANCY/NO VACANCY). In red and blue neon, even a flat announcement
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like OPEN acquires a cold yet undeniable fire.
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But
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neon's cool heat alone did not make the OPEN sign the visual loudspeaker of
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American small business. First, neon had to evolve from handicraft to
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commodity, from carefully considered decision to impulse purchase, from custom
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manufacture to mass production. Only then could OPEN join the pay phone and
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public toilet as invisible icons that don't appear until you look for them.
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The sign's ubiquity was a long time coming. Until a decade
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ago, a simple neon OPEN sign retailed for as much as $400. That's not cheap,
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but it's far less expensive than the first neon sign sold in the United States,
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which blinked on in 1923 when a Los Angeles car dealer had a "Packard" sign
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made for $1,200 (by comparison, the cheapest new Packard on the lot sold for
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$3,600).
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Invented
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by a Frenchman, the neon sign quickly became an Americanism. "Neon in America
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meant progress, vitality, urban excitement. It symbolized American energy,"
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writes Rudi Stern in his 1988 book, The New Let There Be Neon . A neon
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sign in the window also advertised the fact that a merchant was flush enough to
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have spent some coin. But even after the neon patents expired in the '30s and
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the form boomed, signs stayed expensive. And thanks to their fragility and
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artisan nature, they also remained locally produced. In the medium's heyday,
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the 1940s, the United States boasted more than 2,000 neon shops. Today, there
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are a mere several hundred.
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What changed the neon-sign business was the
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beer business. In the course of a few postwar decades, outfits like Fallon
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Luminous Products and Everbrite learned how to manufacture durable,
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transportable neon signs for Coors, Miller, and the various Anheuser-Busch
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brands. Protective plastic housings, sturdier mounts, lighter transformers, and
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shock-resistant shipping boxes gave the signs greater mobility. Mass production
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cut costs.
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But aside
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from beer logos and a few other popular corporate insignias, neon was a tough
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mass-market sell, despite competitors' efforts to break new markets. It wasn't
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until the mid-1980s that Fallon and Everbrite devised blue and red OPEN signs
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(it's a matter of dispute who made the first one), but the way they sold
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them--door-to-door, mostly--kept prices high. A generic OPEN cost about what a
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local shop would charge for one made to order, and the market responded
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accordingly. In a good year, Everbrite sold only about 500 signs.
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Today Everbrite moves 15,000 OPENs a year, and Fallon is
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just as busy. The market blossomed in the late 1980s, with the rise of
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wholesale buyer's clubs like Costco and SAM'S Club. "Their customers were
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mainly small businesses," says Tim Fallon. "We showed a classic size sign to
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SAM'S. They tested it, and it hit." Everbrite President Jeff Jacobs pitched
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Costco, which also saw OPEN signs fly out of the aisles. Now SAM'S Club sells
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Fallon's signs for about $115; at Costco, Everbrite's sell for $119.99.
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Experienced production-line
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workers fashion an OPEN in about 10 minutes. Despite their name, many signs
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contain gases other than neon. A few puffs of argon fill the blue border of an
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OPEN; neon itself powers the red portion of the message. In the new generation
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of OPEN signs, the red is redder and the blue bluer because the glass tubing is
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coated with colored ink. If reheated, as they would have to be in the course of
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repair, the inks melt into brown goop, making the signs such a pain to fix that
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it's easier to buy another than to take a broken model into the shop.
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The classic OPEN sign is a 35-inch by 15-inch
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rectangle, with a dozen feet of 12-millimeter tube in the word OPEN and another
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8 feet in the border. One reason the sign has achieved world domination is
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because the letters' height-to-width ratio approximates the Golden
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Section--1-to-1.618--so beloved of artists, architects, and the ordinary human
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eye. Another is that the size fits most transoms, windows, and walls. Still
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another: The shipping box stacks easily on a standard pallet.
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Mavens
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can discern between makers at a glance. Fallon sets its OPEN in a molded
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plastic case, while Everbrite's mounts on a metal armature. Everbrite markets
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the classic rectangle only, while Fallon offers a vertical OPEN, as well as an
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Art Deco bullet shape.
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The OPEN sign's popularity tracks that of the strip mall.
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Immigrant shopkeepers and boomer entrepreneurs needed to let passers-by know
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they were ready for business. Fifty years ago they'd have scrawled OPEN on a
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shirt cardboard and perched it to catch the eye of a passing pedestrian. But
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who window shops anymore, except at 35 mph, through a window set in the frame
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of a vehicle?
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The lingua
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franca of commercial America has done what Esperanto could not: achieve
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universality. In Vienna, a few neon signs do growl GEOFFNET. But more often the
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word is OPEN--evidence, says one neon connoisseur there, of continental
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affection for Americana, along with a changing European culture. "In Austria,
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there used to be customs about when businesses could operate," says Dusty
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Sprengnagel, who owns a shop called Neon Line and whose book on neon will reach
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store shelves later this year. "Most shops closed at 6 p.m. weekdays and on
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Saturday were not open or were open only until noon. We all knew the rules, so
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no one needed an OPEN sign. But things have changed. Shops may be open later,
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they may be open all of Saturday. The OPEN sign is not pretty, but it provides
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the information you need."
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With OPEN going platinum, why not a neon CLOSED
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sign? Everbrite tried one, but it tanked. An OPEN sign is a binary beast, it
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seemed--if a store owner turned it off, the message was implicit. You couldn't
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say the same of a CLOSED sign--if it was off, would that mean proprietors
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lurking in the back waiting to make a sale?
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An unlit OPEN has a fearsome
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power of its own. "We get calls from people whose signs aren't working. They're
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desperate," Everbrite's Jacobs says. "A guy told me, 'I run a video store. I
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broke my sign washing my window. I've got to have another one right away,
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because my competitor on the next block has a neon OPEN sign. People can see
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that he's open, but with my sign broken they think I'm closed.' "
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