In a quiet stretch of Chippendale, where old warehouses lean into new cafés and the past lingers in brickwork, a fading mural clings stubbornly to the side of a building. The paint has thinned under decades of sun, but the words are still legible: “Motor Mechanic” — and beneath it, a landline number rendered in thick, confident strokes.
The car painted beside it looks vintage even by today’s standards — rounded bonnet, generous fenders, a body shaped more by craft than aerodynamics. It belongs to an era when engines were tuned by ear and grease marked a mechanic’s hands like a badge of honour. The typography is earnest, practical, unadorned — advertising not an image, but a trade.
Time has bleached the colours into soft pastels. Cracks run through the plaster like fine lines on an aging face. Yet the mural endures, stubborn and dignified, refusing to be erased by redevelopment or design trends. The landline number feels especially poignant — a relic of rotary dials and wall-mounted phones, before mobiles dissolved geography into immediacy.
There is something tender in its survival. It evokes a Sydney that moved at a steadier pace, when businesses were local, reputations travelled by word of mouth, and a painted wall was marketing enough. In the shifting landscape of Chippendale, with its galleries and apartments rising from industrial bones, the mural feels like a quiet witness — dated, yes, but rich with memory.
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I love the old look of that sign. Nothing like a race car from the 1920s.
ReplyDeleteIt was eye catching
DeleteGood sign :-D
ReplyDeleteTook a long while to find something good to snap
DeleteTruly a mural of a time gone by, beautifully done. An era when "grease monkeys" fixed carburetors and large hood ornaments were the style.
ReplyDeleteSounds fascinating
DeleteEverytime you mention Chippendale, I think of … well, you know. I wonder if those guys still exist.
ReplyDeleteHehe I am not sure either
DeleteThe racing car graphic on the sign is very nostalgic and the red color is eye catching.
ReplyDeleteIt is reeking nostalgia
DeleteGreat find and cool sign! Take care, enjoy your day!
ReplyDeleteComo nos dices ese cartel nos lleva a otra época en que las cosas se hacían de diferente manera.
ReplyDeleteSaludos.
Aquest món del cartell ja no existeix.
ReplyDeleteSalutacions!
A cool find. Sometimes things last a very long time.
ReplyDeleteThank you for joining the Happy Tuesday Blog Hop.
Have a fabulous Happy Tuesday. ☺
Unless the phone number has been altered later, Sydney did not introduce eight digit phone numbers until 1994, so from that, the sign would be more recent.
ReplyDeleteA lovely old sign.
ReplyDeleteI'm sure the race car from the 20's was a choice to draw attention. Besides, modern race cars aren't nearly as attractive. I like it!
ReplyDeleteThe description of this mural is very good again. Maybe a small career switch.
ReplyDeleteI love seeing ghost signs like this -- signs that are weathers with age but constant reminders of our past.
ReplyDelete