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File:Buttoncopy4.jpg|Button copy sign on US 30 in Ohio, showing reflection of buttons in letters, shield numerals and outline, and arrow
File:Buttoncopy4.jpg|Button copy sign on US 30 in Ohio, showing reflection of buttons in letters, shield numerals and outline, and arrow
File:SouthboundUS99signDark-DowntownSeattle.jpg|At night, the retroreflective buttons on these overhead signs in [[Seattle, Washington]] are often lit up by light sources (such as a vehicle's headlamps) to ensure easier reading
File:SouthboundUS99signDark-DowntownSeattle.jpg|At night, the retroreflective buttons on these overhead signs in [[Seattle, Washington]] are often lit up by light sources (such as a vehicle's headlamps) to ensure easier reading
File:Nogales - Jan 2008-A.jpg|A rare button-copy [[Mexican Federal Highway 15|Mexico Federal Highway 15]] guide sign formerly located after the Mexico-U.S. border crossing in [[Nogales, Sonora|Heroica Nogales, Sonora, Mexico]]. Mexican highway signage generally has neither featured button-copy or [[Highway Gothic|Highway-Gothic]] lettering on its highway signs.
File:Nogales - Jan 2008-A.jpg|A rare button-copy [[Mexican Federal Highway 15|Mexico Federal Highway 15]] guide sign formerly located after the Mexico-U.S. border crossing in [[Nogales, Sonora|Heroica Nogales, Sonora, Mexico]]. Mexican highway signage generally has neither featured button-copy nor [[Highway Gothic|Highway-Gothic]] lettering on its highway signs.
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Revision as of 23:29, 13 June 2019

A highway distance sign in Oklahoma using button copy

Button copy is a type of physical design for road signs in the United States. Round plastic retroreflective buttons made of transparent plastic are placed in rows following the contours of sign legend elements, usually painted white, such as letters, numbers, arrows, and borders. In daylight, the buttons visually blend with the white sign legend elements and so are minimally conspicuous. At night, light from each approaching vehicle's headlamps strikes the retroreflective buttons and is reflected back towards the eyes of the vehicle's driver. Thus the sign is made sufficiently conspicuous and legible for adequately fast and accurate recognition and interpretation by drivers.

Button copy is now rarely manufactured; technologically it has been supplanted by retroreflective sheeting made by various manufacturers in numerous colors and grades.[1] As state departments of transportation increasingly stopped specifying button copy signs in favor of signs made with sheeting, it became uneconomic to maintain production of the materials and supplies to make button copy signs. The last state to specify button copy signs was Arizona, which switched to sheeting in 2000.[2]

See also

References