The Story of the Traditional Shop Awning

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The Story of the Traditional Shop Awning It is the usual early morning and most of the shopkeepers should be preparing for the day by laying out the canvas awning over their shop front. But not anymore. A regular sight once, nowadays the Victorian shop canopy has almost disappeared from the business streets.

Regent Street front in 1827 (image source) The few that exist are often used as shading for outdoor cafes, or by an upmarket retailer who is trying to look a bit classy. The traditional Victorian style awning was such an iconic image of the Victorian and Edwardian high street. But it had a very short-lived existence. And its rise to dominate the streets coincided with the arrival of retail stores and improvements in glass manufacturing. The idea of a busy street lined with many shops is not an old development. Although trading in markets and fairs by way of open stalls had long been done since ancient times, it was not really until the 1600s that shops started to do business along main roads away from the designated market area. Formal shop fronts usually have an open area of the shop being enclosed by a simple screen or windows (if shop owner is rich).


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