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The Pegasus, stretching 40-feet long, 30-feet high and bathed in red light at night, served as a beacon and a message to all who approached they had reached Dallas. The symbol of a city was born.
Kathy Tran and Daniel Rockey were the creative team responsible for the photos within Best of Dallas 2019. Meet Red, the pegasus tour guide who will lead you through the pages of Best of Dallas ...
Red Pegasus' events, including pop-up shops at movie premieres, a monthly happy hour and a book club, are befitting of the self-described "weird" comics store in town.
Two of Dallas’ flying red horses — the city’s unofficial symbols — are getting a makeover as part of a major real estate redevelopment. The 19-foot signs are on two sides of an 18-story ...
Downtown is once again aglow with an old-skool icon -- the Pegasus sign atop the Magnolia Hotel. ... Pegasus Relit; Red Neon Returns To Dallas Skyline. June 29, 2013 / 3:57 PM CDT / CBS Texas ...
So now Red Pegasus needs a new logo of a winged horse that doesn't match Exxon's too closely. "I suspect what we'll have to do is come up with something fairly abstract," Denson said. Twitter: ...
Three years ago, developer Jack Matthews launched a search for the original red Pegasus that blazed atop the Dallas skyline from 1934 until 1999. (It was replaced with an updated version the next ...
The large derricks that hold up the flying red horse have become ... The Dallas City Council on Wednesday approved up to $357,000 in repairs for the Pegasus sign, which sits atop the Magnolia ...
The red Pegasus stayed lit atop the old Magnolia building until 1999, when the rusty symbol was removed and replaced with a shiny new version that was lit on Jan. 1, 2000.
For some strange reason, Dallas loves Pegasus.It’s on Deep Ellum murals and downtown street signs. ... Magnolia was folded into Mobil in 1959, and Mobil adopted the red Pegasus logo.
Red Pegasus Comics Vs Exxon. Published Thu, 02 Jun 2016 09:00:54 -0500 by Rich Johnston | Last updated Thu, 02 Jun 2016 12:49:47 -0500 | Comments.
DALLAS (CBSDFW.COM) - It's a battle of "David versus Goliath" in North Texas as the world's largest oil company challenges a small, Oak Cliff comic shop over its logo. For about the last two years ...