Billboard Collection 【EXCLUSIVE × METHOD】
“A billboard is the largest piece of ephemera most people will ever ignore,” says Marcus Trelawny, a collector in Arizona who owns over 300 billboard faces. “But when you pull one down and lay it on a warehouse floor, it stops being an ad. It becomes a historical document. It has the weather, the fading, the tears from windstorms. It tells the story of where it lived.” Unlike stamps or coins, you cannot buy a billboard face at a convention. Collectors acquire them through a gritty, borderline-industrial network.
Then stand back. You’re no longer looking at an ad for cheap mattresses or fast food. You’re looking at a 700-square-foot artifact of American desire. And that, oddly enough, is worth collecting. Have a billboard story or a face you’ve saved? Share it with the hashtag #BillboardCollector. billboard collection
We pass them at 70 miles per hour, half-glancing at the giant faces hawking soda, lawyers, or the next superhero movie. Billboards are the ghosts of the commercial landscape—ubiquitous, disposable, and designed to be forgotten the moment the next exit appears. “A billboard is the largest piece of ephemera