All too often with muddled street furniture and excessive road-signs, we miss the important ones, and can be some way down the road before we fully realise it.Simple solution - print whatever the roadsign says on the reverse, in mirror-writing.Also handy for variable speed limits like on the M25, where the limit may have changed just as you pass under the gantry.-- coprocephalous, Apr 07 2006 But after years of exposure to mirror-image signs, I now read mirror-image writing as easily as normal writing. So, faced with a glass door, I am just as likely to read the word "PUSH" in mirror writing as I am to read "PULL" in normal writing. Similarly, upside-down writing - if I drive towards the words "NO ENTRY" written upside down on a road, I'm likely to hesitate before realising that it applies to people going the other way. What's needed is a font which is readable normally but completely unreadable in either mirror or upside-down forms.-- hippo, Apr 07 2006 //What's needed is a font which is readable normally but completely unreadable in either mirror or upside-down forms// Welsh.-- coprocephalous, Apr 07 2006 The have this on Ambulances in the US on the front edge of the hood.-- jhomrighaus, Apr 07 2006 What Hippo does.
I'd like for the signs for the other lane to have writing on their backs, written normally, so I can see what they say. I wind up reading them backwards in my mirror far too often, trying to figure out what turn I just missed.-- baconbrain, Apr 07 2006 I also empathise with hippo, I do the same thing. Short stuff like signs are equally legible forward or backward.-- Galbinus_Caeli, Apr 07 2006 random, halfbakery