Jump to content
  • Welcome to the eG Forums, a service of the eGullet Society for Culinary Arts & Letters. The Society is a 501(c)3 not-for-profit organization dedicated to the advancement of the culinary arts. These advertising-free forums are provided free of charge through donations from Society members. Anyone may read the forums, but to post you must create a free account.

Restroom Door Signs


Holly Moore

Recommended Posts

During my trip to Charleston SC I got to noticing the signs on restroom doors. Hardly anyone used Men and Women.

My favorite three:

i2596.jpg

Your Place: Inboards and Outboards - Inboards being women and Outboards, men.

The Anchor Line: He Crabs and She Crabs

The Wreck: Richards and Charlenes

The Wreck is named for a famous post Hurricane Hugo Wreck. The Wreck of the Richard & Charlene

Holly Moore

"I eat, therefore I am."

HollyEats.Com

Twitter

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Holly:

The White Dog Cafe here in Philadelphia has a "Republicans" and a "Democrats" room. :biggrin:

They're both unisex.

Katie M. Loeb
Booze Muse, Spiritual Advisor

Author: Shake, Stir, Pour:Fresh Homegrown Cocktails

Cheers!
Bartendrix,Intoxicologist, Beverage Consultant, Philadelphia, PA
Captain Liberty of the Good Varietals, Aphrodite of Alcohol

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm not advocating boring, but I don't like it when you have to think too hard. I remember seeing doors once that were labeled, "turtles" and "tortoises." I don't think they were unisex, although maybe at the time I was too naive to realize that was the secret.

I have to admit with some embarassment that I eat at Macaroni Grill once a year (xmas eve) with the family. My mother always, always comments on their bathroom doors. (The inside of the women's says "Men," like you're about to walk into the wrong one when you leave the bathroom.) She thinks that's the cleverest thing. Every year she thinks that!

amanda

Googlista

Link to comment
Share on other sites

"buoys" and "gulls" at a mediocre seafood restaurant in Point Pleasant, NJ (one of Jack Baker's places), and probably any number of other similarly-themed places.

maybe i'm old fashioned, but i like "men" and "women". no silly pictures. no plays on words. the last thing i want to do is stare at two or more doors looking clueless when i'm going for the bathroom.

Edited by tommy (log)
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I was just commenting on this subject to my boyfriend last week. We ran into some random bar in Midtown to escape the cold. I went to the ladies room, which had nothing but some sort of Xena-woman painted on it. A man in a similar style was painted on the men's room door. I came back from the experience thinking, while I agree there is much room for creativity on the "Men/Women" theme in some establishments, a bloody bar really should stick to the basics because I can see the possibility for my own confusion if I wandered back there after a few drinks. :huh::wacko:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

NOT that I frequent the places (except when my young cousins were in town and I wanted to try to freak them out a little), but NYC's Jekyll and Hyde minichain has hidden bathroom doors.

In the Greenwich Village location, the hallways is made to look like library shelves. The door is unmarked [a reasonably subtle sign hangs up high - most people miss it completely]. Once you figure out that you are, in fact, in the right general vicinity, you have to push on the wall, and again, and again...until you find it. When drinking a few pints at the bar, it's best to leave for the bathroom slightly before you really need to.

:huh:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

NOT that I frequent the places (except when my young cousins were in town and I wanted to try to freak them out a little), but NYC's Jekyll and Hyde minichain has hidden bathroom doors. 

In the Greenwich Village location, the hallways is made to look like library shelves.  The door is unmarked [a reasonably subtle sign hangs up high - most people miss it completely].  Once you figure out that you are, in fact, in the right general vicinity, you have to push on the wall, and again, and again...until you find it.  When drinking a few pints at the bar, it's best to leave for the bathroom slightly before you really need to.

:huh:

:shock: that's evil!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

As visitors to Ireland (and some Irish pubs) no doubt quickly learned, the Irish word for woman is "Mná" and the word for man is "Fir". Add some clueless tourists and several pints of Guiness. Hilarity ensues.

Sometimes When You Are Right, You Can Still Be Wrong. ~De La Vega

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Heh. We haven't had a good bathroom thread here on eGullet in months. Thanks Holly. :smile:

My least favorite are the ones with vague pictures. They've gotten vague because someone decided that the "female" picture with a big triangular bottom representing a skirt is too old fashioned and sexist. So now it's anything goes.

Hell, I can't always even remember the Male and Female arrow symbols.

Jon Lurie, aka "jhlurie"

Link to comment
Share on other sites

There's an Ohio-based chain of bar/restaruants called Max and Erma's that catered to a singles-that-would-like-to-meet-other-singles clientele. One of these opened in my hometown when I was in high school (you could go if you were under 21 until the early evening). High-school kids thought it was great (and it was fun at the time) with its old-fashioned telephones at each table so you could ring other tables in the restaurant (there were glowing globes with numbers over each table so you knew what to dial) and the carved wooden bust behind the bar of an extremely buxom woman, replete with strategically placed beer taps.

Anyhow, more on topic, the restroom doors had very large, highly-stylized cartoon drawings of a man and a woman (presumably one of "Max" and one of "Erma"--the way they were drawn sort of remind me of Andy Capp characters). The thing was that the women's room had the drawing of Max on the door, pointing to where the actual men's room was to the left, and the men's room had the drawing of Erma pointing to the right (somewhere on each door was a completely unobtrusive little placard with the correct name for the room's intended user). It WAS rather funny watching first-timers burst, full of confidence, into the wrong restroom.... :laugh:

My restaurant blog: Mahlzeit!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

What Eric said.

A bar in Old Sacramento, years and years ago. A full sized horse-drawn fire engine hangs over the bar.

Upstairs..."Men" and "Women" with attendent hands pointing to the opposite door. Separates the locals from the tourists quite effecively. Well, it was funny the first time. Less so later. :rolleyes:

--------------

Bob Bowen

aka Huevos del Toro

Link to comment
Share on other sites

At a local outdoor event there were hired portable loos.

In the mens urinal trailer, just at eye height it read

"For this relief we give much thanks to <name of hire company>"

WHich I guess takes us onto graffiti. Written on the ceiling

"You are now peeing on your shoes"

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'll admit to being amused by the sign in our local outback steakhouse that points patrons to the "used beer department".

What's wrong with peanut butter and mustard? What else is a guy supposed to do when we are out of jelly?

-Dad

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hell, I can't always even remember the Male and Female arrow symbols.

Oh, those are easy to remember. The male has the arrow shooting up in the air; that's because guys can pee over the fence. The female has the cross hanging down; that's because we can't.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

My memory is a bit foggy, but I believe the Tune Inn on DC's Capitol Hill has taxidermied (a word?) rear ends of antelopes or something above each of the doors. You have to take a look to pick the one that most closely matches your..... errr..... physiology.

peak performance is predicated on proper pan preparation...

-- A.B.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Amusing. The one I remember best that caused no end of confusion for those who are unacquainted with animal husbandry or taxonomy was at a local ski area whos slopes served as a grazing area for a got herd during the summer months. The rest rooms were labeled Nannies and Billies. Seemd simple enough to me but cause lots of confusion.

Speaking of bathroom threads.... a friend of mine used to drag her co-workers into a trendy dowtown hilly restauirant for a drink whenever they were in town on business - for the sole purpose of having them all see the tres kewl stall doors in the bathrooms. These are the glass doors that are clear when they're unlocked and turn opaque when the lock is engaged. I think that either the bathrooms or changing rooms at the downtown Prada store in NYC has the same deal going.

My pet peeve is the places that use the symbol for feminine or masculine gender - the circle with the arrow or the circle with the cross. Used to be that you get a few drinks in me and I can't keep them straight. I've been sober for years and I still can't keep them straight (no pun intended). I think they should just make 'em all unisex and use Prince's glyph on the door.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

When I was abou 11 or 12 I went to Italy with my parents. I spoke no other language but English at the time, and remember being totally baffled by the bathroom signs, which though standard Italian were very confusing to little old me.

" Signori" and " Signore" seemed WAY too similar, and so if I was visiting a bathroom alone (without parental guidance) I always waited to see someone either enter or exit one of the doors. Of course, it didn't dawn on me at the time that the person entering might have been another English-speaker about to make a big mistake!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

High-school kids thought it was great (and it was fun at the time) with its old-fashioned telephones at each table so you could ring other tables in the restaurant (there were glowing globes with numbers over each table so you knew what to dial)

Getting slightly off topic but when I was growing up in the 60's, we had a local singles bar called the "Ding-A-Ling Lounge". They had the same phone system in place but also had the convenience of a "ring check" at the door (just a gag I hope but it was ostensibly a place for married guys to stash their wedding rings while they cruised the single women). It didn't last long for obvious reasons.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

×
×
  • Create New...