Boston Massachusetts Avenue MIT Harvard road sign street blade ONE SIDED 30×4
Made to the exact state standard used in the 1980s. Boston Massachusetts Avenue sign. It weighs about 3 lb.
Made to the exact state standard used in the 1980s. Boston Massachusetts Avenue sign. It weighs about 3 lb.
Made to the exact state standard used in the 1980s. Boston Massachusetts Avenue sign. It weighs about 6 lb.
Would you like a number not seen here?. Anything you would like, made with unsurpassed quality right here in the good old US of A. Made to the exact 1971 state specification that was in use until 2006, when California began using the (boring) federal standard one-way sign, which is identical, other than being on a rectangular blank.
Made to the exact 1956 state specification that was in use until 1978. This is a high quality, heavy steel sign. Accept no imitations that may be one-third this price, but are one-tenth the quality.
Made to the exact 1956 state specification that was in use until 1978. This is a high quality, heavy steel sign. Accept no imitations that may be one-third this price, but are one-tenth the quality.
Made of a combinations of styles the Fish and Wildlife Service has used over the years to create an attractive display piece. The sign depicts a pair of wedge-tailed shearwaters, which is also known as the ʻuaʻu kani in Hawaiian.
This is a high quality, non-reflective replica sign printed on heavy steel. 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.
The sign is made to the 1985 specification used by the city of Los Angeles. Los Angeles David Avenue sign. Anything you would like, made with unsurpassed quality right here in the good old US of A.
You will only get this high level of quality in design and materials from Signs by Jake. 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.
Signs like this, complete with the seal of the City of Los Angeles, are used to indicate the borders of the neighborhood of Venice, as well as over 100 other officially-recognized neighborhoods throughout the city.