Atelier Super Marché Noir letterpress • signpainting
Quand les anciennes presses typographiques et les techniques artisanales de lettres peintes se combinent à merveille. Des œuvres inutiles aussi par ici ✌️
www.supermarchenoir.fr
Quand les anciennes presses typographiques et les techniques artisanales de lettres peintes se combinent à merveille. Des œuvres inutiles aussi par ici ✌️
www.supermarchenoir.fr
October 12, 2025 at 10:11 AM
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Previously on this theme at bl.ag online: 'Lowdown Lettering: The Hidden Craft of Roadliners'.
https://bl.ag/lowdown-lettering-the-hidden-craft-of-roadliners/
#signs #lettering #signpainting
https://bl.ag/lowdown-lettering-the-hidden-craft-of-roadliners/
#signs #lettering #signpainting
Lowdown Lettering: The Hidden Craft of Roadliners
Celebrating the craft of the Roadliners, whose lettering on tarmac is hidden in plain sight.
bl.ag
October 6, 2025 at 1:17 PM
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Robotic tarmac signs coming to a road near you: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G5sBztIATio
Some background: https://www.cleveland.com/news/2025/09/how-a-cwru-prof-and-a-local-mechanic-created-a-robotic-system-to-make-road-painting-safer.html
#signs #robotics #signpainting
Some background: https://www.cleveland.com/news/2025/09/how-a-cwru-prof-and-a-local-mechanic-created-a-robotic-system-to-make-road-painting-safer.html
#signs #robotics #signpainting
RoadPrintzBy Rich Exner, cleveland.com
CLEVELAND — As motorists pass by, a robotic arm mounted to a large pickup truck glides out and paints a crisp white crosswalk, then some arrows.
No crew in traffic. No stencils. No overnight shifts. Just one operator in the cab and a machine doing work that’s been largely unchanged for years— until now.
This is the vision of RoadPrintz, a Cleveland startup that’s spent seven years developing robotic road sign painting technology.
Co-founders Wyatt Newman, a former Case Western Reserve University professor, and Sam Bell, a Cleveland Heights mechanic, finally have their first customer: the Missouri Department of Transportation.
“It’s been a long time coming,” said Newman, who began work on the idea while still teaching electrical engineering at CWRU. He jokes that calling a 7-year-old company a startup is a bit of an oxymoron. “But we’re finally rolling.”
RoadPrintz co-founder Wyatt Newman RoadPrintz co-founder Wyatt Newman, a Case Western University professor emeritas, explains the technology behind the company's robotic street painting system.Rich Exner, cleveland.com
The company’s roots are firmly planted in the Cleveland area. It’s an outgrowth of CWRU’s Technology Transfer Office. They’ve taken up space at a former White Motor facility on Cleveland’s East Side. The robotic equipment and computers are mounted on a Ford truck made in Avon Lake. The paint comes from Aexcel in Mentor.
And to pay the bills to get this far, they depended in part on family and friends as investors, and $1.5 million in grants from the National Science Foundation - the first $1 million of which was awarded in 2022.
Newman brought his expertise in electronic and computer systems engineering. Bell, who formerly ran the Lusty Wrench auto repair shop in Cleveland Heights, contributed his mechanical know-how.
Together, they led the work to build a system they believe could replace the labor-intensive method of painting road signs with robotic precision.
RoadPrintz system The RoadPrintz system is preloaded with about 80 symbols and numbers that follow the Manual of Uniform Traffic Control Devices guidelines. Operators can also type in custom messages on the spot.Rich Exner, cleveland.com
Such special marking work on the roadways is now largely done either with stencils and paint, or with pre-fabricated markings applied to the road with heat, Newman said. This is different.
Mounted on a Ford F-550 Super Duty extended cab truck, the RoadPrintz system uses a robotic arm to paint arrows, bike symbols, lane markings and custom lettering onto pavement.
The system is preloaded with about 80 symbols and numbers that follow the Manual of Uniform Traffic Control Devices requirements. Operators can also type in custom messages on the spot.
“This is not automated striping,” Newman said, noting the difference between this and the line-striping trucks that paint while moving down the roadways.
“This is for the specialty signs — the ones that crews have been laying down with stencils for decades.”
The robot can even place orange cones before or after painting, further reducing the need for workers to step into traffic. The paint dries in about 10 minutes, allowing traffic to quickly return to normal.
“It’s hard work, terrible hours and dangerous,” Newman said of traditional methods. “This changes everything.”
Missouri first put the system through a trial before agreeing to the purchase, Newman said. A spokesperson for the Missouri Department of Transportation said that although the contract has not yet been fully executed, the agency plans to buy one of the trucks.
“There are several benefits, but the greatest is minimizing the number of crew members for these types of pavement markings and getting boots off the ground,” Jon Nelson, Missouri State Highway safety and traffic engineer, said in a statement provided by MoDOT.
RoadPrintz, first sale This RoadPrintz truck at the company's Cleveland headquarters has been set aside for delivery to the Missouri Department of Transportation, as noted by the sign at the lower right,Rich Exner, cleveland.com
Newman estimates the department will recoup its $500,000 investment in just two years through labor and productivity savings.
“This is an industry that has been stagnant for 100 years,” he said. “We hope to disrupt it — and completely change the way it’s done.”
At a recent open house showcasing the technology, Cuyahoga County Executive Chris Ronayne praised the innovation.
“You’re upping the game at RoadPrintz,” Ronayne said. “You will save us money. We need a lot of efficiencies.”
While the county contracts out its painting needs, Cleveland does some of its work in house, Council President Blaine Griffin said. He promised after the open house ceremonies that he would speak with the Public Safety Department about how RoadPrintz’s technology could be used to free up workers for other tasks.
RoadPrintz has already tested its equipment in the city, painting crosswalks on Public Square and bus-only lane markings along Euclid Avenue. With its first sale near, the company is looking to ramp up production and expand its reach.
“This is safer, faster and more precise,” Newman said. “And it’s made right here in Ohio.”
Rich Exner Stories by Rich ExnerCleaner than cars, quicker than bikes, but not without risks: The e-bike boom in Northeast OhioI-271 exit ramp will close for several hours on MondayBulldozers roll as Browns gear up for Brook Park stadium construction (photo gallery)Browns announce AECOM Hunt, Turner Construction to build Brook Park stadiumOhio’s first super highway turns 70: Looking back at the road that reshaped travelRich ExnerReporter
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www.cleveland.com
October 6, 2025 at 1:16 PM
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San Francisco folk, make your own sign with New Bohemia's Damon Styer at this @letterformarchive workshop series starting 1 November:
https://letterformarchive.org/shop/what-s-your-sign-baby-make-your-own/
#signpainting #signwriting #lettering #sanfrancisco
https://letterformarchive.org/shop/what-s-your-sign-baby-make-your-own/
#signpainting #signwriting #lettering #sanfrancisco
October 1, 2025 at 4:30 AM
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New(ish) at bl.ag online, 'The Mike Stevens Journal, Volume 1, Number 5', reproducing this issue where he's riffing on brush technique, letter formation, and mahl sticks.
https://bl.ag/the-mike-stevens-journal-volume-1-number-5/
#signpainting #lettering #signwriting #showcards
https://bl.ag/the-mike-stevens-journal-volume-1-number-5/
#signpainting #lettering #signwriting #showcards
September 25, 2025 at 9:25 AM
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Oh wise fediverse, can anyone offer any historical context as to why a large signboard such as this would have been dedicated to detailing weather records in the early 1900s? # Signwriting # SignPainting # Felixstowe # Weather # AskFedi # YeOldeSignShoppe
Interest | Match | Feed
Interest | Match | Feed
Origin
typo.social
September 22, 2025 at 9:27 AM
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Oh wise fediverse, can anyone offer any historical context as to why a large signboard such as this would have been dedicated to detailing weather records in the early 1900s?
#signwriting #signpainting #felixstowe #weather #askfedi #yeoldesignshoppe
#signwriting #signpainting #felixstowe #weather #askfedi #yeoldesignshoppe
September 22, 2025 at 9:29 AM
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Throwback to 2019 when I wrote up my trip to Tokyo Letterheads for Eye Magazine: https://www.eyemagazine.com/blog/post/letters-from-tokyo
More at bl.ag online here: https://bl.ag/tokyo-letterheads-now-bigger-in-japan/
#letterheads #ioafs #signpainting #tokyo
More at bl.ag online here: https://bl.ag/tokyo-letterheads-now-bigger-in-japan/
#letterheads #ioafs #signpainting #tokyo
Tokyo Letterheads: Now Bigger in Japan
Review of Tokyo Letterheads, the first international meet in Asia.
bl.ag
September 5, 2025 at 3:58 PM
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Now that Pupo's has put up a new store sign, they've gone back to the handpainted signs in the windows. Isn't this becoming a lost art? They are done by hand. #signs #signpainting #grocerystore #localbusiness
September 3, 2025 at 5:07 AM
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The traditional sign painter who is responsible for most of Manchester’s most eyecatching spots
Gregg - aka Cactus Signpainting - is part of a resurgence in the craft.
www.manchestersfinest.com
August 11, 2025 at 6:37 PM
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1 likes
I've been making a "cost of" series of signs that answers the question, "How much does fascism cost?"
#signpainting #lettering #handlettering #letteringart #letteringartist #typography #typographer #politics #protestart #antifascist #antiracist #design #watercolor #painting
#signpainting #lettering #handlettering #letteringart #letteringartist #typography #typographer #politics #protestart #antifascist #antiracist #design #watercolor #painting
August 10, 2025 at 6:25 PM
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6 likes
Our August 2025 digimag is here! The issue captures scenes from the Letterheads’ 50th anniversary, large-scale murals, residential signs and more: signsofthetimes.com/digital
August 1, 2025 at 2:01 PM
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Here are the previous short films in the 'When Better Letters Met' series. I'd love to do more of these if anyone knows where to access funding.
https://bl.ag/tag/when-better-letters-met/
#signpainting #shortfilms #independentfilmmaking
https://bl.ag/tag/when-better-letters-met/
#signpainting #shortfilms #independentfilmmaking
When Better Letters Met - BLAG Magazine: Adventures in Sign Painting Craft, Community & Culture
Adventures in sign painting craft, community and culture with BLAG (Better Letters Magazine), the only print and online publication dedicated to the trade.
bl.ag
July 29, 2025 at 6:34 AM
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Letterform face-off across West O’Reilly Street in Presidio, Texas. #letterforms #SignPainting
July 25, 2025 at 8:23 PM
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London folk, you are invited to the world premiere of 'When Better Letters Met Brian Walker' next Tuesday, 29 July.
Find full details at https://bl.ag/brian and please pass along details of this free event to friends and family.
#signpainting #signpainter […]
[Original post on typo.social]
Find full details at https://bl.ag/brian and please pass along details of this free event to friends and family.
#signpainting #signpainter […]
[Original post on typo.social]
July 22, 2025 at 12:02 PM
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I'm consolidating my accounts so please follow along with @blag (more active now) and/or @sam (likely to be more active in the future) for all things #ghostsigns #signpainting #signwriting #lettering and tangents.
July 21, 2025 at 5:53 AM
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Oakland CA, faded wall signs. Finally got a decent shot of this one and was able to straighten it in photoshop. #signpainting
July 20, 2025 at 4:22 PM
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The first screening of my new short film, When Better Letters Met Brian Walker, will take place in London on Tuesday, 29 July.
Please let me know if you can make it, and tell your friends.
https://bl.ag/introducing-a-new-better-letters-film/
#signpainting #signpainters #hackney #shortfilm
Please let me know if you can make it, and tell your friends.
https://bl.ag/introducing-a-new-better-letters-film/
#signpainting #signpainters #hackney #shortfilm
Introducing a New Film From Better Letters
Preserve Hackney signwriter Brian Walker's story of a life on the brush via this new short film.
bl.ag
July 12, 2025 at 4:16 PM
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🫧 Degree show time 🫧 Glimpse of my MA thesis: »Signwriting in Kinshasa: Layers and Traces of a Practice«. Huge thanks to everyone that was involved 💜 #signwriting #signpainting #research #design #designhistory #visualculture #designstudies #typography #kinshasa #drcongo #decolonial #art #theory
July 12, 2025 at 2:35 PM
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#channelletters #3dletters #tabeladunyasi #signage #signs #signagedesign #yurtdisi #ledsignage #ledsigns #ledsign #sign #shopsign #kutuharf #goldpaslanmaz #signbusiness #advertisingdesign #signmanufacturer #channelsign #çatıtabela #signpainting #signaletique #alıntabelası # bayitabelasi
July 1, 2025 at 5:03 PM
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My report is in the works, but here's a great write-up of what went down at Letterheads 50 from Vanessa Power:
https://www.signsofpower.com/blog/letterheads-50
#signpainting #letterheads #murals #ioafs
https://www.signsofpower.com/blog/letterheads-50
#signpainting #letterheads #murals #ioafs
Sign Heaven in Cincinnati: Letterheads Turns 50
Letterheads 50 hosted in the American Sign Museum, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA.
We were lucky enough to make it to this year’s Letterheads gathering in Cincinnati, Ohio, from June 20th–22nd, and wow, what a weekend! This one was extra special, marking 50 years of Letterheads meet ups and it brought together over 450 sign painting fans from all over the world for three days of demos, murals, chats and general sign-nerdery.
The event was hosted at the _American Sign Museum_ , which I’ve been dying to visit for years after seeing photos online. So when I found out Letterheads 50 was happening there, I booked my ticket right away and it did not disappoint. Someone described it as “Disneyland for sign painters,” and honestly, they nailed it. The museum’s packed with beautiful old signs dating all the way back to the 1800s, neon, metal, distressed murals, gold leaf on glass, hand-painted posters, all kinds of styles. I was in total sign heaven!
Letterheads has been going since 1975, it started as a way to keep traditional signwriting alive and it’s grown into this amazing international community where people come together to share their love of letters, swap tips and learn from one another. I’ve been to a couple of previous ones in Amsterdam and London, but this anniversary edition was something else.
The weekend was full of demos, talks and hands-on sessions. There were experts showing techniques in everything from casual script and gold leaf to pinstriping and distressed finishes. There was no rigid schedule or pre-registration, we could float between sessions freely, which worked out brilliantly. I managed to see a bit of John Cox and Gary Godby’s distressed sign demo, then popped over to Mark Oatis’s talk on luscious layouts. So good!
One of the highlights was the four murals being painted inside the museum’s event space over the weekend, recreations of beautiful vintage ads. I got to jump in on one of them, painting alongside my husband Charlie and an amazing crew from Quebec, the US and the UK. It was such a great buzz working together on the mural, chatting about the kinds of projects we each work on and how things are done in our different corners of the world.
We stayed on in Cincinnati for five days in total and what a brilliant city. It’s actually got the most public murals per capita in the States and you can really feel it when you walk around. There’s a local organisation called ArtWorks that’s behind loads of the murals, the whole city feels like an open-air gallery.
All in all, Letterheads 50 was an absolute treat, inspiring, energising and a real joy to be part of such a warm and talented community. We’re already looking forward to the next one!
www.signsofpower.com
June 29, 2025 at 11:23 AM
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it honestly also reminds me of signpainting
June 25, 2025 at 8:30 PM
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the problem is, it will
the design industry is very much fad/fashion driven
but anything that ends the death grip of geometric sans will be a relief
expect a stream of primary coloured "circus signpainting" logos for a while
the design industry is very much fad/fashion driven
but anything that ends the death grip of geometric sans will be a relief
expect a stream of primary coloured "circus signpainting" logos for a while
Genuinely, it would rule if this presaged a big change in logo typography for the rest of the 2020s
Not the point at all, but someday, when the dust has settled, we need to talk about how good that logo is
June 25, 2025 at 2:33 PM
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Nice to see regular BLAG columnist Gustavo Ferrari in the 'pages' of Print Magazine:
https://www.printmag.com/designer-profiles/gustavo-ferrari-fileteador/
#FileteadoPorten̈o #signpainting #buenosaires #argentina
https://www.printmag.com/designer-profiles/gustavo-ferrari-fileteador/
#FileteadoPorten̈o #signpainting #buenosaires #argentina
A Tour of Maestro Fileteador Gustavo Ferrari’s Studio in Buenos Aires
When I traveled to Buenos Aires last November for a soccer tournament with my LA team, I knew I had to check out the local sign painters. I’m incapable of going anywhere without researching the sign painting scene. While most plan ahead for a trip by looking up restaurants, museums, and other tourist attractions, I prepare by looking up the sign painters in the city.
Ahead of my trip to Buenos Aires, I learned about the mesmerizing work of Gustavo Ferrari.
Ferrari is a Buenos Aires-based Fileteado artist, otherwise known as a Maestro Fileteador. “Fileteado porteño” is a traditional Argentinian art form and ornate painting style that is particularly prominent in the capital, Buenos Aires. Walls, windows, awnings, cars, plaques, and more are festooned with Fileteado signage throughout the city, which is characterized by delicate flourishes, dynamic shading, scroll motifs, and vibrant color combinations. Fileteado was established as the signature art form of Buenos Aires in the early 20th century, appearing on trade carts. It’s now the core visual identity of the city, going strong after all these years and kept current by masters like Ferrari.
Ferrari is the founder of Ferrari Fileteados and has been painting Fileteados and other signs since 2001. Within Ferrari Fileatado, he collaborates with his wife, Nina, to make hand-painted commissioned works on all types of surfaces, including vehicles, glass, objects, murals, blackboards and signs. Each work is unique and personalized, with a customized development from a sketch to a final design. Nina is a fine artist and painter in her own right, who specializes in the portraiture details featured in many of Ferrari’s pieces.
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> A post shared by Fileteado & Lettering (@ferrarifileteados)
Ferrari now showcases his work around the world while continuing to paint locally in Argentina and hosting in-person and online workshops to teach the style globally. When I reached out to Ferrari ahead of my trip, he generously invited me to his studio in Buenos Aires, and I eagerly accepted his invitation. Below is a documentation of my visit.
* * *
Ferrari walks me through his collection of work from fellow Maestro Fileteadores he’s collected over the years, on display at his studio.
At the heart of Ferrari’s craft as a Maestro Fileteador himself is a pure love, passion, and appreciation for the art form. He’s been collecting the work of other Fileteador craftsmen for years, which he proudly displays throughout his studio alongside his own contemporary pieces. Of the Fileteado visionaries whose work Ferrari collects, there’s no one he covets more than Leon Untroib. To Ferrari’s delight, Untroib’s daughter donated a significant amount of her father’s sketches and patterns to Ferrari in 2020, which he was able to match up to some of the signs in his collection.
* * *
Exploring Ferrari’s studio is a feast for the eyes, with every detail of every piece more delicious than the last. As a sign painter myself, his skill level truly bowled me over. Seeing his brush work up close and in person, as well as taking in so many of his pieces alongside one another, illustrated just how talented he is in ways photos and videos simply can’t truly capture.
From start to finish, Ferrari’s process is done 100% by hand. He doesn’t use a computer or any other digital tools at all, not even for the initial design or to create his patterns. He sketches out his designs and then creates his patterns with pencil, pen, and paper as well.
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> A post shared by Fileteado & Lettering (@ferrarifileteados)
> View this post on Instagram
>
> A post shared by Fileteado & Lettering (@ferrarifileteados)
As part of the studio tour he gave me, Ferrari showed me the commission he is currently working on below.
* * *
Here are a few more shots I snapped from details at Ferrari’s studio:
* * *
There’s no better way to learn about an artist than by going to their studio. I knew Ferrari’s work would be impressive from what I’d seen online, but receiving a personal tour of his workspace in Buenos Aires was an intimate experience I’ll carry with me as an artist forever. Hearing him talk about the history and cultural significance of Fileteado with such enthusiasm, seeing his face light up as he presented Untroib’s patterns next to their corresponding signs, and seeing his own finished pieces and works-in-progress was an experience that defined my trip to Buenos Aires.
From the bottom of my sign-painting heart, thank you, Gustavo!
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June 24, 2025 at 1:40 PM
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#tabeladunyasi #signage #signs #signagedesign #yurtdisi #ledsignage #kutuharf #goldpaslanmaz #signbusiness #channelledletters #advertisingdesign #signmaker #signmanufacturer #channelsign #signpainter #signpainting #retrotabela #pleksıampultabela #goldkutuharf #ampultabela
June 16, 2025 at 4:43 PM
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