Funny Signs (12 Photos)

These playful public signs and sidewalk setups aren’t just jokes — they’re proof that humor thrives in everyday urban spaces.

From a stick-sharing library for dogs to a parody of the Hollywood dream in front of a drab apartment block, these interventions surprise, mock, or comfort with absurdity. Featured locations include Sweden, Belarus, and North America, showcasing how universal cleverness can be — especially when it’s scribbled in chalk or stuck to a pole.

More!: Funny Signs (15 Photos)


A black sandwich board with the handwritten message "A WISE DOCTOR ONCE WROTE" followed by two lines of intentionally messy scribbles meant to mimic illegible doctor handwriting, placed beside a stone building and flower box.

1. A Wise Doctor Once Wrote

A black sandwich board sign outside a building reads: “A WISE DOCTOR ONCE WROTE” followed by an illegible scribble mimicking a doctor’s handwriting.


A pair of flip-flops placed on a small stool with a white cloth and a sign reading "INVISIBLE NAKED MAN WITH FLIP-FLOPS" beside a transparent container for donations, set on a cobblestone street.

2. Invisible Man With Flip-Flops

On a busy sidewalk, two flip-flops rest neatly on a cloth-covered stool. In front is a cardboard sign: “INVISIBLE NAKED MAN WITH FLIP-FLOPS,” and a donation box half-filled with coins.


A chalkboard standing on a city sidewalk outside a shop entrance, reading "All Americans must be accompanied by an adult" in uneven handwritten lettering.

3. All Americans Must Be Accompanied

A street sign written in chalk outside a café says: “All Americans must be accompanied by an adult.”


A printed flyer taped to a wooden post with bold text inviting people to a free event where someone plans to burn all their own artwork in the front yard, including a photo of art pieces scattered on the floor.

4. Bad Art Burning Invitation

Posted to a telephone pole, this flyer reads: “WATCH ME BURN ALL OF MY ART IN A BIG PILE IN MY FRONT YARD.”


A hand-drawn flyer attached to a city utility pole showing a cartoon snail and the text “Gary, come home,” referencing the SpongeBob character Gary the Snail.

5. Gary Come Home

A lost pet poster features Gary the snail from SpongeBob SquarePants, with the simple plea “Gary, come home.” The sign references a famous emotional scene from the cartoon, turning nostalgia into public art.


A handmade wooden sign leaned against a tree that reads “Dog Library: Take a stick, Leave a stick” with a pile of sticks arranged below it on a grassy roadside.

6. Dog Library

Next to a tree, a small wooden sign reads: “DOG LIBRARY. Take a stick. Leave a stick.” Below it is a neatly arranged pile of branches. A simple but imaginative way to delight passing dogs — and their humans.


A round road sign with a red diagonal strike banning the silhouettes of Don Quixote and Sancho Panza on horseback, placed in front of a windmill in a grassy field at sunset.

7. No Don Quixote Zone

This official-looking sign bans figures resembling Don Quixote and Sancho Panza on horseback. Positioned near a windmill, it humorously references Cervantes’ iconic scene where Don Quixote charges at windmills, believing they are giants.


A triangular red and yellow warning road sign with a pixel art figure of Link from Zelda on horseback, holding a sword and shield, beside a winding forest road.

8. Link Crossing Warning

A modified traffic warning sign by Pappas Pärlor, shows Link from The Legend of Zelda riding a horse with sword and shield raised. It’s a street art remix that replaces the usual generic rider with a pixelated game character.

More by Pappas Pärlor: 90 Pixel Art Masterpieces: Pappas Pärlor’s Perler Bead Street Takeover


A blue pedestrian crossing sign modified so the crosswalk stripes resemble piano keys turning into music notes, with a silhouette of a dancer added to the top of the sign.

9. Musical Crosswalk Sign

A pedestrian crossing sign by Etisk Vandalism, has been creatively altered: its stripes now resemble piano keys flowing into musical notes, with a miniature figure dancing on top. A whimsical twist that adds rhythm to a routine crossing.


A dirt mound in front of a grey apartment building with white block letters spelling “HOLLYWOOD” attached, mimicking the famous Hollywood sign in a rundown setting.

10. Hollywood

In front of a grey Soviet-style apartment block, a mound of dirt features large white letters spelling “HOLLYWOOD.” It’s a sarcastic jab at glamour and reality — a mock version of the iconic sign in a place far from California.


11. Time of Monsters

A clever street sticker quoting the Italian philosopher Antonio Gramsci: “The old world is dying, and the new world struggles to be born: now is the time of monsters.”


People write congrats because they cant spell congrajlashins


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6 Comments

  1. Whoever wrote the captions has not read Don Quixote (not even the children’s editions). The knight of the sad figure did NOT defend the windmills; he attacked them, believing them to be giants.

    • That’s why the signs a ” no don Quixote zone ” because they don’t want them to attack the windmills

  2. @streetartutopia That naked man appears to be wearing his flip flops on the wrong feet!

    • @uk_csi @streetartutopia Was stumbling over that to 😆.
      And this is the only picture I did not see on that site before – lot's of recycling 😅.

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