Road signs in Ireland
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- Chris Bertram
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Re: Road signs in Ireland
They weren't big on route numbers then, were they? And it looks like the old Gaelic font must have been near enough unreadable.
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Re: Road signs in Ireland
Oddly the fingerpoint signs at the junction had the route number, these were widely used, the ADS only on main roads.Chris Bertram wrote:They weren't big on route numbers then, were they?
All in all that iteration of direction signage wasn't as well thought out as the warning signs.
Possibly it hadn't undergone the same evolution from books to signage as roman. However, on the 1926 warning signs I find it as legible as the All CAPS sans serif English text.And it looks like the old Gaelic font must have been near enough unreadable.
"I intend to always travel a different road"
Ibn Battuta 1304-1368
Ibn Battuta 1304-1368
Re: Road signs in Ireland
Old no parking sign
"I intend to always travel a different road"
Ibn Battuta 1304-1368
Ibn Battuta 1304-1368
Re: Road signs in Ireland
The photo isn't clear. I expect the top half is ná páirceáil (no parking) and the bottom some sort of detail on that, but I cannot make it out.Berk wrote:What do the words on the sign say??
"I intend to always travel a different road"
Ibn Battuta 1304-1368
Ibn Battuta 1304-1368
Re: Road signs in Ireland
It's a hinged sign so probably ON THIS SIDE TODAY.
Bryn
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She said life was like a motorway; dull, grey, and long.
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Terminally cynical, unimpressed, and nearly Middle Age already.
She said life was like a motorway; dull, grey, and long.
Blog - https://showmeasign.online/
X - https://twitter.com/ShowMeASignBryn
YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/@BrynBuck
Re: Road signs in Ireland
I'd like to know what all the people are looking at.bothar wrote:Old no parking sign
Re: Road signs in Ireland
Something fancy I imagine.Owain wrote:I'd like to know what all the people are looking at.bothar wrote:Old no parking sign
Make poetry history.
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Re: Road signs in Ireland
This shop was very well known. It was run by a larger than life character from Scotland, who had a greater gift of the gab than the Irish, and who was never surpassed in self promotion.
http://www.rte.ie/archives/2016/1214/83 ... he-people/
http://www.rte.ie/archives/2016/1214/83 ... he-people/
"I intend to always travel a different road"
Ibn Battuta 1304-1368
Ibn Battuta 1304-1368
Re: Road signs in Ireland
I think you're right. Such hinged signs, regulating unilateral -- alternating from day to day, and usually time-restricted -- parking were once common in GB too. The Irish wording is therefore probably ar (an) taobh seo inniu.Bryn666 wrote:It's a hinged sign so probably ON THIS SIDE TODAY.
Re: Road signs in Ireland
This seems likely, you can see the T in the second word.Viator wrote:I think you're right. Such hinged signs, regulating unilateral -- alternating from day to day, and usually time-restricted -- parking were once common in GB too. The Irish wording is therefore probably ar (an) taobh seo inniu.Bryn666 wrote:It's a hinged sign so probably ON THIS SIDE TODAY.
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"I intend to always travel a different road"
Ibn Battuta 1304-1368
Ibn Battuta 1304-1368
Re: Road signs in Ireland
I agree. ALL CAPS always equals lower legibility in my view (my main grouse against French directional signage which, in other respects, I find excellent).bothar wrote:[...] on the 1926 warning signs I find it as legible as the All CAPS sans serif English text.Chris Bertram wrote:And it looks like the old Gaelic font must have been near enough unreadable.
Another thing is that (while I wholeheartedly prefer symbols alone) the Irish-language texts in these examples do frequently make more sense than those in English: e.g. bóthar trasna ("road across") vs junction end (eh? what?); iol-bhóithre ("multi-roads") vs junction complex.
Re: Road signs in Ireland
1950s signage in Carlow
http://www.igp-web.com/Carlow/Dublin_Street_7.jpg
http://www.igp-web.com/Carlow/Dublin_Street_7.jpg
"I intend to always travel a different road"
Ibn Battuta 1304-1368
Ibn Battuta 1304-1368
Re: Road signs in Ireland
AA road sign at junction
https://www.alamy.com/stock-photo-1950s ... 89227.html
https://www.alamy.com/stock-photo-1950s ... 89227.html
"I intend to always travel a different road"
Ibn Battuta 1304-1368
Ibn Battuta 1304-1368
Re: Road signs in Ireland
This would be a better warning sign than anything we have in the UK for this junction, which routinely causes near-gridlock and near-misses.
Rather than JUNCTION COMPLEX, the caption should be changed to COMPLEX JUNCTION, perhaps with an exclamation mark.
Re: Road signs in Ireland
Nice crossroads sign. I think this possibly on N2 north of Ashbourne, but it is a zoom lense of some sort.
"I intend to always travel a different road"
Ibn Battuta 1304-1368
Ibn Battuta 1304-1368
Re: Road signs in Ireland
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Last edited by odlum on Sat Sep 29, 2018 21:50, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Road signs in Ireland
Another oldie, with a parking sign and directional signs at this junction
"I intend to always travel a different road"
Ibn Battuta 1304-1368
Ibn Battuta 1304-1368