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Molly Block

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You don’t see something like this every day.
During a random, first-time visit yesterday to Tim Siedell’s bad banana blog, Tim’s entry from Friday, featuring the work of Austin-based photographer Jay B. Sauceda, caught my eye. Tim …

You don’t see something like this every day.

During a random, first-time visit yesterday to Tim Siedell’s bad banana blog, Tim’s entry from Friday, featuring the work of Austin-based photographer Jay B. Sauceda, caught my eye. Tim had posted several photos and this description from Jay’s Web site: “Before there was vinyl printing there were big brick walls and craftsmen who covered said walls with their commercial artwork. This is my ever growing collection of those that I find while on the road.”

Midway through my looking at Tim’s post, I scrolled back up to the second photo – it’s the one pictured above – and stared at it for several seconds before my brain “clicked.” Tim’s blog didn’t give the building’s location; for me, it didn’t need to … the Hoskins Building, which I know sits near the courthouse in the somewhat small, central Texas town of Gonzales (pop. ~8,000), shows a partial view of a weathered Coca-Cola ad for my grandfather’s business!


August 23, 2010
Tags advertising, ghost signs, photography, Coca-Cola, Texas, street, art, vintage
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View a favorite vintage sign photo series:

Texas Vintage Neon Signs
92 dpi screen Texas Neon Now Gone.jpg
92 dpi screen Texas Favorite Study 2.jpg
92 dpi screen Oak Forest Shoe Shop.jpg
92 dpi screen Cafe Neon Sign 4.jpg
Holiday Plaza Motel 148  n 92 dpi.JPG
Landmark Lodge 52 n 92 dpi.JPG
92 dpi screen Landmark in Fort Worth.jpg
Clock Coffee Shop in El Paso 92 dpi.JPG

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