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Glenmore Bourbon Whiskey Sign
$500.00
Here is a Glenmore Bourbon Whiskey Sign from the Glenmore Distilleries Company Inc. located in Louisville, KY. This Glenmore Bourbon Whiskey Sign is from the 1940’s era and is in excellent condition considering how old it is.
This sign is approximately 13″ by 7″ and is made of a compressed composite material. It was made by the Dura-Products Manufacturing Company located in Canton, OH.
1 in stock
Categories: Other Advertising, Signs
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Here is a Esslingers Premium Beer Sign from the Esslinger Brewery Inc. located in Philadelphia, PA. This Esslingers Premium Beer Sign is from the 1940’s era and is in excellent condition for it’s age.
The graphics on this Esslinger Beer Sign is of the Esslinger’s logo and the brewery’s mascot “King Pin (aka Little Man)”. The typography on the sign reads “Philadelphia’s Only Premium Beer” which was a tagline that the brewery used in it’s marketing plan predominantly in the early 1940’s era.
This Esslinger’s Beer Sign is approximately 4″ X 6″ and is made of foil over composite material and would have had a string hanger and metal easel on the back for display.
ABC Beer Bullet Light
Here is a ABC Beer Lighted Sign from the Aztec Brewing Company located in San Diego, CA. This ABC Beer Lighted Sign is from the 1940s era and is in excellent condition for it’s age. The graphics on this sign depict a ABC Supreme Beer Bottle with the typography reading "The Supreme Brew" and "Class in a Glass"; the sign is very eye catching when lit as well when it’s off. Signs like this one would have been displayed on the bar back to advertise to patrons about ABC Supreme Beer.
This sign was made by the Cincinnati Advertising Products Company located in Cincinnati, OH; and were also known as "Blue Ribbon Displays" under the Cincinnati Advertising Products Co. name. This style of sign was known as a "bullet light" also known a "shield light", and was usually made of a curved piece of reverse-painted glass mounted on a wooden base, with a metal shroud and was back lit.
NOTE: This rare bullet light however, is made of reverse-painted plastic mounted on a wooden base. It is guaranteed antique and original.
ALL ELECTRICAL ITEMS ARE SOLD AS-IS, AS VINTAGE COLLECTIBLES ONLY, AND ARE NOT INTENDED FOR USE. ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS, IMPLIED, OF MERCHANTABILITY, AND OF FITNESS FOR ANY PARTICULAR USE ARE DISCLAIMED. ELECTRICAL ITEMS SHOULD BE INSPECTED AND/OR SERVICED BY A LICENSED ELECTRICIAN BEFORE CONNECTING TO A POWER SOURCE.
ALL ELECTRICAL ITEMS ARE SOLD AS-IS, AS VINTAGE COLLECTIBLES ONLY, AND ARE NOT INTENDED FOR USE. ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS, IMPLIED, OF MERCHANTABILITY, AND OF FITNESS FOR ANY PARTICULAR USE ARE DISCLAIMED. ELECTRICAL ITEMS SHOULD BE INSPECTED AND/OR SERVICED BY A LICENSED ELECTRICIAN BEFORE CONNECTING TO A POWER SOURCE.
E&B Special Beer Sign
Here is a E&B Special Beer Sign from the Ekhardt & Becker Brewing Company located in. Detroit, MI. This sign is from the 1940s era and is in very good condition considering how old it is.
It approximately 14″ by 10″ and is made of lithograph-printed tin wrapped over a cardboard backer. The sign was made by the Bastian Brothers Company located in Rochester, NY. The graphics on the sign depict on of the brewery’s flagship beers “E&B Special Beer” with the text that reads “Here’s Heath!” and “It’s Kraeusened”. The German term “Kraeusened” is meaning for the addition of actively fermenting wort as an inoculant to induce fermentation in a different batch of wort or beer.
Canadian Pale Lager Sign
Here is a Canadian Pale Lager Sign from the Canadian Pale Products Association (previously the Graupner Brewing Company) located in Harrisburg, PA. This Canadian Pale Lager Sign is from between 1930 to 1932 and is in very good condition considering how old it is.
The sign is approximately 20″ by 14″ and is made of embossed metal. Canadian Pale Lager was a prohibition-era malted beverage similar to “near-beer” which had an alcohol percentage between 1/2% – 1% alcohol by volume. Signs like these would have been displayed in general stores or cafes to advertise these malted beverages during prohibition when alcohol was outlawed throughout the United States.




