PROMENADE STORE SIGNS
This lot is offered without reserve. STAR TREK: DEEP SPACE NINE SET DRESSINGS AND DECOR
PROMENADE STORE SIGNS

Details
PROMENADE STORE SIGNS
Three signs made from wood, particle board, and acrylic plastic painted as metallic pewter and bronze in Cardassian style, third sign is carved foam, painted as distressed, sculpted stone, largest -- 35x42x8in. -- used as set dressing on the promenade set of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (3)
Special notice
This lot is offered without reserve.

Lot Essay

Ricardo Delgado designed these signs. He felt that the multicultural population of the station would likely have a wide variety of languages, so shopkeepers on the Promenade might use pictogrammatic signs, rather than written ones. Delgado noted that shopkeepers in medieval times used similar signage, since much of the population could not read. For most of his Promenade signs, Delgado devised a rather abstract style, so it's not entirely clear what they signify. His signs must have worked, however, since most of those shops remained prosperous for the entire seven year run of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine.

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