March paul fulks

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Cover Story

Great, by Design

A closer look at Paul and Toni Fulks

Paul Fulks, owner of 3Di Sign+Design, is equal parts art and science – while enjoying one wholly satisfying life

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f you press him on the matter, Paul Fulks would likely tell you that he prefers the picture below to the one on view some 27 pages earlier. You know the photograph to which we’re referring – the big one. The cover shot. That one’s nice, he would say. But the one on this page is important.    For all the acclaim associated with the Gateway Monument – or any of the countless designs by Fulks and his 3Di Sign+Design company that welcome visitors to cultural hot spots Paul and Toni Fulks sit on and urban treasures the Gateway Monument that welcomes drivers on across the country – the I-30 to Arlington. photograph on this page reveals Fulks’ truest passion: his family.    That’s why he’s genuinely smiling as he poses with his wife Toni while dozens of drivers heading east on I-30 glance with respect at his art piece that beckons them to Arlington. That’s why, as this story was coming together, the first thing he said he wanted to accomplish with its telling was to Photo: Richard Greene make sure it would leave someone else smiling: his grandmother Helen Saunders in Ironton, Ohio.    Ironton is where Fulks got his start in life. It’s where many family members still reside. The son of a Baptist preacher dad (Joe) and a nurse mom (Shirley), Fulks learned early life lessons in morality, faith and compassion. They define him even now, some several decades after he took the leap off solid Ohio soil – right into the ocean.    Even before he graduated college, Fulks decided to join the U.S. Navy, where he became a Nuclear Electrician Designated Submarine. That’s a nebulous service term for someone trained to protect his country in like fashion should a madman on the other side of the ideological map decide to bring nuclear harm to our side. His is a

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ARLINGTON TODAY • March 2018 • arlingtontoday.com

hero’s story, even if, technically, he never had to flex his hero muscles while on duty. Instead, he taught fellow sailors what to do in case of the unthinkable emergency.    “I think my military background is what pushed me toward perfection,” he says, recalling one of many lessons he has learned over a variety of career paths, some that were downright fascinating.    For example, after the Navy, Fulks moved to Waco, where he parlayed the chemical background he acquired in the service into a gig at M&M Mars – writing another chapter of unsung history in the process. Let the record show that it was Paul Fulks who mixed the first Strawberry/Banana Starburst candy. “I have to admit,” he says, “I’m kind of proud of that.”    Eventually, science gave way to art, and Fulks moved north up I-35 to the city he now calls home to pursue a musical career. “I was dabbling in country music at the time,” he recalls. “I saw that there was a lot of great music coming from the Stockyards, so I tried my hand at singing and playing the guitar.”    There was, however, a major drawback to that career choice, at least with regard to creating some more history. “I discovered,” he says, “that I was much better at a whole lot of things than I was at music.”    One of those things was “making lemonade.” Despite a failed bid to become a C&W headliner, Fulks managed to land a position shaping the Stetsons of those who sing under the spotlight. He also shaped the caps for practically every Texas Rangers baseball player at the time not named Nolan Ryan – “Nolan had his own guy.”    Next came a foray into the sign business, where he worked as a designer at a Richardson company for 13 years, the last few of


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