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Vacuum-Form Signage (bethmathews.substack.com)
Animats 16 hours ago [-]
"That's what a Vac-U-Form can do!"[1]

TechShop used to have a medium sized vacuum forming machine, but it was lost in one of their moves. Those are useful for tool trays. Lay down all the tools for some kit, vacuum-form a tray, and put the tray in a case for the kit. Often used in aerospace, where you want to make sure nobody left a wrench inside the engine or fuel tank.

[1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lCvgvWiZNe8

Gigachad 12 hours ago [-]
That sounds a million times easier than modeling gridfinity trays.
MisterTea 4 hours ago [-]
It is much easier and faster. My friends father had a vacuum forming business, mostly making blister packs. I even worked with him fixing a big packaging machine in Brooklyn. You can make a primitive version with a plywood box with drilled holes and a vacuum cleaner.

People who have been in manufacturing for a long time understand all the methods used and the common theme is simplicity. There are tons of great uses for 3D printing but like robot arms, I see them misused time and time again to perform tasks a much simpler process/mechanism can perform. Go watch the TV show "How It's Made" and some of the machinery and mechanisms are delightfully simple. This is what universities don't teach their students and they graduate only knowing how to wield giant, complex hammers.

SoftTalker 3 hours ago [-]
Everything should be made as simple as possible, but not simpler.
JKCalhoun 5 hours ago [-]
Agree. So often, after immersing myself in the digital for a stretch, coming back to analog can feel almost meditative.
andyfilms1 5 hours ago [-]
Gridfinity is fun, but just about any other organizational method is easier and faster.
ludicrousdispla 12 hours ago [-]
reminds me of a certain car trunk scene in Simon Pegg's "Kill Me Three Times" (although it used a custom foam insert and not vacuum-formed plastic)
EvanAnderson 16 hours ago [-]
I grew up seeing these signs all over and never gave them a thought. I love articles that bring something to my attention that I never thought to think about.

Aside: If you are a sign aficionado the American Sign Museum in Cincinnati will make you very happy: https://www.americansignmuseum.org/

msuniverse2026 11 hours ago [-]
Oh wow, just got my first age-verification redirect because I'm Australian and the 'online safety act' is kicking in. Welp.
SyneRyder 11 hours ago [-]
For other Australians, I'm not seeing that, and the article is totally SFW. It's all about the technology of signs for small retail & service stores in the 20th Century. I assume the comment above was a joke that initially went whoosh over my head.
ashleyn 4 hours ago [-]
Wow, we used to have a florist/floral nursery around my parent's place LONG ago (like, they had to have ripped it down by the early 2000s) and for years I vaguely recalled it having a somewhat unique looking sign with a big globe lamp and two stacked, rounded-corner rectangular plastic signs. This was almost certainly the brand of sign it was, and the installation of the sign was probably some time in the 1970s. Amazing what small, inconsequential mysteries get solved by a blog article.
JSR_FDED 16 hours ago [-]
Signage has such a huge impact on how we experience an environment, the vibes it gives off.

Comparing the US and the Netherlands - the US seems much more chaotic and organic than the Netherlands with its unified government standard typeface.

euroderf 12 hours ago [-]
Schiphol airport has exemplary signage.
haritha-j 4 hours ago [-]
Thanks for this, its really neat. One suggestion, I would love it if you also included some photos of these lit up at night.
buellerbueller 5 hours ago [-]
If you ever find yourself in Cincinnati, Ohio, one of the most underrated things there is the "American Sign Museum" which has many examples of this form of signage, as well as the history of advertising signage. They even have a neon glass signworks on-site.

Ironically, the informational signage on the exhibits is somewhat lacking, so I recommend taking the free guided tour, which is about 45-60 minutes in length.

MarkusQ 2 hours ago [-]
"[...] plastics had significantly accelerated due to the military’s need during WWII for lighter, more durable materials to create 3D topographical maps"

What?! Citation needed. Lots of topomaps were printed on paper, but I've never heard of the military using 3d plastic maps. Certainly not enough to accelerate the development of plastics. Nor can I find any credible source for the claim.

teddyh 4 hours ago [-]
userbinator 14 hours ago [-]
Something about that rounded-rectangle shape is evocative of the YouTube logo - perhaps I was primed towards that as one of the signs shown is advertising "TV's".
Cockbrand 12 hours ago [-]
I'm fairly certain that the YouTube logo, especially the original one, is meant to symbolize a Cathode Ray Tube (CRT) TV like this one: https://spencertified.com/cdn/shop/collections/Sears-Solid-S... (random example from image search). In times of linear TV, you'd ask whether anything was on the tube when you were wondering whether you'd want to watch something.
bigbuppo 16 hours ago [-]
This is great. I've been wondering about these for decades.
cucumber3732842 3 hours ago [-]
There's another transmission shop near me with the same exact sign. Different name and phone number and different colors.

I can see why they'd only want to make that cutaway mold once though.

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