Our little
ol' mailbox was in dire need of a little TLC.
Not nearly as much as our sweet little neighbor lady's, however, so I
decided, since I was planning to do ours I might as well do hers at the same
time.
After
removing them from their wobbly perch the young one and I got busy and removed the
hardware before getting after them with a piece of medium fine sandpaper. It took a lot of elbow grease and a putty
knife to get the surfaces smooth and the old numbers scraped off. Especially the neighbor's. It was pretty rough and originally harvest
gold. Go figure.
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Our faded green one and our neighbor's rusty multi colored one |
With a rag
we got them all cleaned up and in the sunshine they dried really quick. Once again the dollar store shower curtain
was spread out on the lawn and tacked down with rocks from the flowerbeds.
We used
Claret Wine spray paint which matches the trim on our respective houses perfectly. It looks really red in the pictures, but it actually is more burgandy. After several light coats, inside and out we
left them all day to dry. We cleaned up
the hardware and got it put back on that evening.
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Sanded, cleaned and drying in the sun |
Next came
the numbers I bought last month in anticipation of this project. To me it was like icing on a cake. But guess what? The stupid things wouldn't stay on. They kept popping off. Not sticky enough, so they'll be going back to
the store.
I figured
I'd have to take the numbers back and then go somewhere else to search for new
numbers. Not what I was hoping to do on
Memorial Day. I really wanted to be done
with this. Then I figured I'd just make
a stencil and use the black spray paint I already have in the garage and just
spray the numbers on. Duh! Why didn't I just think of that in the first
place.
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The young one learned how to spray paint |
I used
Stencil font on the computer and printed out our house numbers on a sheet of paper and used my
razor knife to cut them out. Since our
address is only one number different than the neighbor I only had to print one
extra number. Once I was done with ours
I cut off the last number and replaced it with hers. Then I stenciled her box.
We
reinforced the post so it wouldn't wobble any more with a couple more long
screws and then the mailboxes were put back in place. What an amazing difference! I took before and after pictures to show our
neighbor since she is pretty much housebound and won't get to see them until
one of her kids picks her up for a doctor appointment.
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All dry and ready for hardware and numbers |
For the
price of a can of spray paint ($3.67) we now have a couple of pretty spiffy
mailboxes, if I do say so myself. Won't the mailman be
surprised? He might even feel like he can safely put off getting his next tetanus booster. J
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Much improved! |
Now all I
have to do is return the numbers next time I go grocery shopping since Home
Depot is right next door. Stenciling the
numbers saves me over $5.00. I'll put
that toward our next project.
They turned out great! Love the red color. I need to work on my wobbly mailbox this year too.
ReplyDeleteTania
They were way past needing a little TLC. Much, much better.
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