
CUF – July 2015 © Frank H. Jump

Earl J. Hilvers opened his Butcher Shop & Grocery on McMicken Ave. Cincinnati, Ohio in 1931. – Hilvers Website

Over-the-Rhine – June 1999 © Frank H. Jump

Vintage Embossed Tin Sign – iCollector
vintage mural ads & other signage by Frank H. Jump & friends
June 1999 © Frank H. Jump
July 2015 © Frank H. Jump
Likely the largest existing wall sign in St. Louis, this beauty sits on the west side of what was originally the King-Brinsmade Mercantile Company and is now the King Bee Lofts. Several fading ads adorn the vast brick face, some of them partially overlapping others, having been painted at different times. From top to bottom,ad copy reads “King Bee Hats – King-Brinsmade Merc. Co.” “Wrigley’s Spearmint Pepsin Gum – Trade Mark Registered – The Flavor Lasts” and, within the pointing arrow, “Buettner’s – Seventh and Washington – Home Furnishings – Arrow Stamps.” To the right of Buettner’s is a barely legible ad for “Anti-Kamnia Tablets – Ask For A-K Tablets.” – Hats, Shoes and Overalls – Wm. Stage- The Painted Ad
Back in 1999 when I was already an Internet sensation with the Fading Ad Campaign website, I met Wm. Stage on a cross-country tour while driving a misguided friend back to New York from Santa Fe. Stage was very generous with his knowledge of signs and locations in his domain of St. Louis. We slept on his couch the evening we met and he sent me out on a photo expedition the next morning. This was one of the walls he recommended I shoot and one of the few left untouched in the last sixteen years.
© Frank H. Jump
© Frank H. Jump
© Frank H. Jump
In a historical research document released by the Lower Manhattan Development Corp (RENEW- NY) 102-104 Greenwich Street is described as follows:
The five-story brick Italianate building at 102-104 Greenwich Street is similar to the adjacent building at 106 Greenwich Street. It also appears to date to the second half of the 19th century and was originally a store and factory building. It has stone window lintels and sills and a bracketed metal cornice (see Figure 5-18). The ground floor has been altered with modern storefronts, and the windows have been replaced.
June 2015 © Frank H. Jump
I remembering coming to eat at Sung Chun Mei 1 after ACT UP meetings in the late 80s. Enzo and I would go there on occasion when in the Village. We happened upon it again after the LGBT Pride NYC and it looked so perpetually closed. I could remember the last time we were there. Pork and string beans in a brown sauce. Pan fried dumplings. Cold noodle with sesame sauce. Eggplant with garlic sauce. I found this article that mentions it called No Longer Driving the Culture, is the Village Now “a Geography of Nowhere?” in the Washington Square Park Blog where Catherine says:
I knew Sung Chun Mei, the restaurant referenced in the article as closed and sitting shuttered for six years (picture above), well. It was a vibrant thriving business, a Chinese restaurant I considered my “go to” place to order dinner often. It is hard for me to even think of it as closed.
Jeremiah Moss references Sung Chun Mei more recently on September 28th in his Vanishing NY Blog. Living in Brooklyn, working in Brooklyn – I am so out of touch with Manhattan anymore. So much is changing in Flatbush, I find it hard to keep up with the changes and harder still to keep up with what isn’t changing beyond my immediate horizon.
BUY MY BOOK
PRICE FOR ONE BOOK AND SHIPPING
& HANDLING FOR THE USA ONLY.
© 2025 Fading Ad Blog | Powered by WordPress
A WordPress theme by Ravi Varma
Notifications