photography by Paul Swanson
When David Menard learned people were volunteering their time to bring old neon signs back to life for an upstart Edmonton museum, he knew immediately that it was the Mike’s News sign he wanted to work on.
The Mike’s News piece – featuring an engrossed reader hiding behind a copy of the Toronto Star Weekly – is now the most elaborate of the 11 signs that make up the outdoor Neon Sign Museum on 104th Street. The reader’s foot swings and a puff of smoke rises from his cigar.
For Menard, though, it wasn’t the complexities that attracted him to the animated sign; rather, it was pure nostalgia. “I remember going to the Mike’s News store on Jasper Avenue as a young teenager, going down with my buddies and looking at car magazines,” says Menard. He restored the Mike’s News sign while working for New Look Signs, pouring more than 100 hours into the piece’s rebirth.
Such sentimental stories abound since the museum, the first of its kind in Canada, began glowing in February 2014 on the outside of the Telus building on 104th Street and 104th Avenue. “Every one of those signs tells a story,” says Tim Pedrick, a senior sales representative at Hi Signs The Fath Group and past president of the Alberta Sign Association (ASA). The ASA has overseen the restoration of the signs, distributing them to member companies who offer time, ensuring that these stories are kept alive.
Pedrick has watched passersby stop at the museum to reminisce about the local businesses that once were, from hardware store W.W. Arcade to Georgia Baths, a steam-bath facility.
“The signs talk,” he says. “There’s all that history.”
But neon signs are complex, Pedrick says, and labour-intensive to build and maintain. They require tubes of glass heated in sections and bent into shape, a skill few Edmontonians – called neon tube benders – still practice. “It’s such a unique craft,” Pedrick says. The glass tubes contain neon or other inert gases and, when a modest electric voltage is applied to electrodes at the ends, the gas glows. When easier, less expensive lighting options emerged – first fluorescent, then LED – neon waned.