(Los Angeles Times photo illustration; photos by readers; Chiara Alexa / For The Times) Here in auto-saturated Los Angeles, the bumper sticker has always been a healthy form of self-expression. But in ...
Campaign bumper stickers are part of a hallowed (if sometimes raucous) tradition, as Martha Teichner now tells us: It’s been said that Americans consider their cars extensions of their personalities, ...
Gone are the days of “Coexist” or “This car climbed Mt. Washington.” Bumper stickers have lately gotten a lot weirder, and much more niche. By Charles W. McFarlane You can spot them in the parking lot ...
Bumper stickers are like tiny billboards for your personality. They make people smile, spark conversations at red lights and turn an ordinary car into something that’s uniquely you. Maybe yours ...
Jeanne Vaccaro, a scholar and curator from Kansas, always wanted to become a bumper sticker person. For years, she collected stickers from artists, musicians and bookstores, but she kept them away ...
I used to think that the most dangerous thing about bumper stickers was that they make curious drivers inch ever closer to the car in front of them in order to read the things ("He Put the Duh in W," ...