AeroSignage buyer guides for hotel room number signs, CNC-carved versus cast sign production choices, door plaque material comparisons, and production-ready artwork files for custom architectural signage. Page 2 of 4.
What should buyers prepare before requesting a quote?
For procurement teams evaluating AeroSignage Buyer Guides, this AeroSignage page is a production-screening reference, not a fixed catalog SKU. It explains the buyer context, sign family, material and finish variables, and factory-backed review points that affect quotation. A useful RFQ should include dimensions, quantity, installation location, mounting surface, artwork or reference photos, target finish, packaging needs, and delivery market. AeroSignage is the official international sales and service office for an affiliated signage manufacturing base, so overseas buyers can discuss specifications under the AeroSignage brand while CNC carving, surface treatment, assembly, and export coordination remain connected to real workshop capability. This helps hotel owners, designers, contractors, and purchasing teams compare style, budget, finish, and production route before they request a quote. When the page includes photos, catalog links, video, or proof notes, those assets should be used as references for specification review, not as automatic stock guarantees.
What evidence supports this page?
Evidence for AeroSignage Buyer Guides comes from AeroSignage-owned website assets: product close-ups, workshop photos, the public PDF catalog, the local workshop video, and anonymized buyer context collected for export sales review. These materials are used to explain manufacturing capability without promoting the affiliated factory trademark. Claims about size, equipment, processes, exhibition feedback, and buyer visits should be treated as capability signals for RFQ screening; order-specific certification, compliance, and engineering documents still need written confirmation during quotation.
Brass, bronze, and cast aluminum address plaques differ mainly in patina behavior, weight, weathering, and cost structure. Solid brass and bronze offer authentic copper-alloy aging at roughly three times aluminum's weight, while CNC-carved aluminum with brass-effect or aged bronze finishes delivers the same visual language with easier mounting, lighter shipping, and more flexible per-address customization.
There is no single official standard, but most hotel room number signs measure 4 x 4 to 6 x 8 inches on guest doors, with numerals 1.5 to 3 inches tall and mounting centered 55 to 65 inches above the floor. Suites, public areas, digit count, door hardware, material thickness, and relief depth adjust those ranges.
Hotel signage should be specified as part of the FF&E procurement package, not treated as a last-minute decoration. This guide explains how buyers can organize room numbers, suite plaques, wayfinding, exterior identifiers, factory evidence, artwork files, samples, packaging, and export coordination before requesting a custom signage quote.
Choosing a custom hotel signage supplier means verifying manufacturing capability, not comparing catalog photos. Overseas buyers should confirm whether they are dealing with a manufacturer, trading company, or catalog reseller, request workshop and sample-board evidence, test specification review quality, approve samples before bulk production, and confirm export packaging. This vetting checklist explains what strong answers look like and which red flags predict project problems.
Cast aluminum and CNC-carved address plaques mount differently on brick, stucco, siding, and stone. This guide compares mounting-hole, hidden-stud, and adhesive routes, explains wall-by-wall anchor and sealing practice, covers placement for street visibility, and shows why mounting hardware should be planned with the plaque order so holes, studs, and finish-matched screws arrive ready to install.