Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Mesa's famous 'Diving Lady' hotel indication may create come back splash


The 78-foot-high fluorescent indication of a snorkeling woman in three levels of a springboard jump that fronted the Starlite Inn in eastern Mesa for 50 decades was poorly broken when it dropped during a serious storm in Oct 2010.
The Diving Lady, which beckoned like a shining example to road-weary tourists during an era when family members created lengthy visits by car, could be seen from at least a distance away. The indication once fronted a share that has lengthy been loaded in
Millett produced the indication as he did several famous neon signs in the area such as the natural gator at Port Adams' Alligator Village, once next to the Starlight; a 35-foot great western with a lasso at the lengthy gone Round-Up Drive-in on East Johnson Road and 60th Road in Scottsdale; and the acquainted Invoice Johnson's Big The apple company cafe symptoms.


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Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Neon Lights the City of Light


Georges Claude displays his neon lamps to the public at the Paris Expo. Electric advertising is about to take a colorful turn, not to mention quite a few twists.

Claude, an engineer and chemist, started experimenting with neon as the filler gas for a tube around 1902. The red color of the light was distinctive. Claude was onto something.

After some more tinkering, Claude created two 38-foot-long neon-tube lamps to show to the public in 1910. They were pretty. But business turned out to be pretty slow … at first

By 1919, red-and-blue neon light graced the entrance of the Paris Opera House. The first city in the United States to get the neon treatment was Los Angeles Franchises for Claude Neon Lights, Inc., sprang up in other U.S. cities. Tokyo got its first neon signs in 1926. Neon advertising signs proliferated around the globe. The bright red light soon picked up the name “liquid fire,” and people started to refer to Georges Claude himself as “Claude Neon.” He was nearly 90 when he died in 1960, by which time Las Vegas had started its neon-aggrandized growth.

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