‘Unexpectedly fascinating’

The Times Literary Supplement

London Street Signs is a visual history of London’s street nameplates – the signs which detail the name of each road. They are a remarkable archive of lettering, a unique collection of styles and forms that stretches right back to the seventeenth century.

They hide in plain sight, these modest labels; we use their information daily, but too often fail to really notice them. They are visual anchors, telling us where we are, but temporal anchors too, telling us where we’ve come from.

In August of 2016 Alistair Hall picked up his camera and wandered out onto the streets of London, with the idea that it might be useful and interesting to document the incredible variety of the city’s street nameplates. Almost four years and over four thousand photographs later, he has pulled his pictures together in this book. He has selected the most significant nameplates, the most beautiful, the most curious. From enamel plates to incised lettering, from the simplest cast-iron signs to the most ornamental architectural plaques, a visual record of this rather shaded corner of our collective history.

The book also tells some of the fascinating stories behind these unassuming treasures, revealing where they came from before being affixed to brick or stone for decades, sometimes centuries, to come – from the iconic nameplates of the City of Westminster to the stunning tiled signs of Hampstead, from the revival nameplates of Lambeth to the ghost signs of London’s no-longer existent N.E. postal district.

Reviews

 

‘Alistair Hall’s London Street Signs brought me joy. His images, detailed captions and entertaining text made me look at street signs with renewed aesthetic appreciation and curiosity.’

Twentieth Century Society’s C20 Magazine

‘Mr Hall writes in an informative way about an unexpectedly fascinating topic.

The Times Literary Supplement

‘Alistair Hall’s beautifully-produced collection of London street name signs will delight typographers and historians.’

London Historians

London Street Signs is the stunning new book from Alistair Hall. An absolute must for type fans – one of the design books of the year.’

Daniel Benneworth-Gray

‘Hall has created a seminal work which will sit proudly in any library.’

Better Letters

‘Everything I hoped it would be, nerdy and engrossing in all the right ways.’

Professor Phil Baines, Typography Professor at Central Saint Martins

‘A glorious visual feast’

The Counter Press

‘The best book about urban design since Paul Shaw’s Helvetica and the New York City Subway

Kindred Types

‘A brilliant book… meticulously researched, beautifully presented and an absolute steal’

David Pearson

 
 

About the author

 
alistair-hall.jpg

Alistair Hall has been writing about design and visual culture for over ten years, and London Street Signs is his first book. Alistair is an award-winning graphic designer based in London. He set up We Made This, his design studio, in 2004, and specialises in thoughtful, simple, beautiful print design. He has made work with clients including Penguin Books, Historic Royal Palaces, the National Trust and John Lewis.

Alistair is also the art director and co-founder of a children’s writing and mentoring centre, the Ministry of Stories, as well as its fantastical shopfront, Hoxton Street Monster Supplies.

He also teaches at Central Saint Martins and The School of Art, Architecture and Design at London Metropolitan University; and has given talks about his practice across the UK and overseas.

Follow Alistair on Twitter.

Book specification

 

Title: London Street Signs – A visual history of London’s street nameplates
Author: Alistair Hall
Publisher: Batsford
Price: £14.99
Publication date: 3 September 2020
Format: Hardback
Size: 210 x 235 mm
Pages: 192
Images: 350+
ISBN: 978-1-84994-621-6