Showing posts with label dupont circle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dupont circle. Show all posts
Wednesday, October 27, 2010
Dry Cleaning Sign
Sigh. Someone told me about this sign before, but I didn't actually believe it existed before I saw it in person last night. Dupont Circle.
Thursday, January 7, 2010
Subtle Terra Cotta Warriors Ad
National Geographic Society, December 2009. Very subtle use of Chinese in this ad for the terra cotta warriors exhibition. You can just make out the Chinese character 兵 ("soldier, warrior") inside the letter "O" in WARRIORS.
I've also seen these related sidewalk ads (this photo taken earlier this week in Dupont Circle):
Labels:
art,
chinese,
dupont circle,
museum,
national geographic society
Wednesday, January 6, 2010
I HEART NERDS
Dupont Circle. I think this Hello Kitty lunchbox is supposed to read "I [HEART] NERDS" but instead it reads "I [APPLE] NERDS." Huh?
(For more on the storefront window display in which this appeared, see the following post.)
(For more on the storefront window display in which this appeared, see the following post.)
Labels:
art,
dupont circle,
japanese,
semiotics,
store
Japanese Lucky Cats
Dupont Circle, January 2010. The waving (or welcoming) cat, often understood to invite good fortune and prosperity, is a common sight in Japanese (and other Asian) restaurants and shop windows. On the right, a golden maneki neko (招き猫) in gold bears the kanji or Chinese character 福 ("luck, good fortune") on its belly.
The handwritten Japanese text attached to the gold cat reads あけましておめでとう (akemashite omedetou) = "happy new year."
For more on the cultural significance of the "maneki neko," see this online taxonomy of lucky cat styles and colors.
For more on the Hello Kitty lunchbox in this image, see my previous posting.
P.S. I've been told another way to say "happy new year" in Japanese is 新年おめでとうございます (shin-nen omedetou gozaimasu).
Thursday, December 10, 2009
Lambda Departing
Dupont Circle, December 2009. Lambda Rising (the only LGBT bookstore in DC) has just announced it is closing at the month's end. The Greek letter "lambda" (λ) has long been associated with the gay rights movement and is often used as a symbol for the LGBT community. Incidentally, this stylized lambda logo vaguely resembles the Chinese character 入 (ru) = "to enter" (a place), "to join" (a group).
For more on the closure of Lambda Rising, see the coverage in the DC Agenda (the LGBT publication that recently rose from the ashes of the abruptly-closed Washington Blade).
P.S. For some speculation on how "lambda" came to be associated with the LGBT movement, see this website.
(Photo courtesy of Suite101).
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