Saturday, January 18, 2014
Wednesday, January 15, 2014
Monday, January 13, 2014
3645 North Stone Avenue
On the west side of busy North Stone Avenue is a mailbox that's probably caught your eye as you rode by. It's a dark brown metal color, wrapped by huge flowers and leaves.
(Though I'd spotted this place before, I finally took the photos on May 20th — by riding my bike along narrow Stone Avenue early in the morning, before there was much traffic. Bike lanes here are tiny, and there are no parallel side streets along this part of Stone.)
There's lots more iron work around the home. See the page 3645 North Stone on TucsonArt.info.
Friday, January 10, 2014
Wednesday, January 8, 2014
Monday, January 6, 2014
2520 North Fontana Avenue
If you've been following the last few entries, you know that I was riding along North Fontana Ave. on May 20 of last year. And if you've already seen today's entry on the Tucson Murals Project blog, you'll know that there are handpainted murals on the porch. (If you missed it, click there.)
And here you can see the box. It's black, on a dark post set with square and rectangular tiles.
Friday, January 3, 2014
3307 North Fontana Avenue
On May 20th, I just happened to be riding far enough on Fontana Avenue that I spotted two similar mailboxes eight blocks away from each other. You saw the first box, at 2520 N. Fontana, yesterday. (If you didn't, you can click there.)
Here's the second box, the one farther north. It's black, with the house number and a saguaro between the posts.
(I normally don't show saguaros, but this coincidence made the boxes worth showing.)
Thursday, January 2, 2014
2507 North Fontana Avenue
This plain white box has its house number and a saguaro between the posts:
I found it (and the box at 3307 North Fontana; see tomorrow's entry!) on May 20, 2013.
P.S. The last half of last year was sooooo busy that I had to cut the number of mailbox “posts.” But I'm back on my bicycle, and I'm hoping to get back to posting boxes every day — at least, every weekday.
Wednesday, January 1, 2014
Monday, December 30, 2013
Santa Koala, 3202 East 28th
We started 2013 with a koala bear mailbox, at 3202 East 28th Street, complete with branches and leaves. When I rolled by last Friday, the 27th, I saw that the owner had added some Christmas cheer to the street.
Friday, December 27, 2013
Wednesday, December 25, 2013
2345 East Elm Street
In case Christmas Day in Tucson doesn't turn out to be bright and sunny, the photo in today's Tucson Murals Project post, Maybe a mural, part 49: Giant flowers on Elm will brighten up your day.
There's also a mailbox at 2345 East Elm, but it's not quite as spectacular as the flowers:
Homeowners at 2345: Thanks for the art… and the box!
PS: I've been super-busy these past few months. There just hasn't been time to post many mailbox photos. I'm hoping to break away a day, soon, to post a lot of the backlog of boxes. Please check back!
There's also a mailbox at 2345 East Elm, but it's not quite as spectacular as the flowers:
Homeowners at 2345: Thanks for the art… and the box!
PS: I've been super-busy these past few months. There just hasn't been time to post many mailbox photos. I'm hoping to break away a day, soon, to post a lot of the backlog of boxes. Please check back!
Sunday, December 1, 2013
Pantano River Park (at Speedway)
Is it the World's Biggest Mailbox? Well, it doesn't actually hold mail, so… maybe not:
It's just east of the Lowe's store on Speedway & Kolb. There's a map and some overall info on the Pima County website. The November 12, 2012 Arizona Daily Star article Tucson Oddity: Postcard tiles, 'mailbox' send welcome message tells more.
I took this photo on November 13th. There are more photos on the Tucson Murals Project blog in the April 21, 2010 entry.
It's just east of the Lowe's store on Speedway & Kolb. There's a map and some overall info on the Pima County website. The November 12, 2012 Arizona Daily Star article Tucson Oddity: Postcard tiles, 'mailbox' send welcome message tells more.
I took this photo on November 13th. There are more photos on the Tucson Murals Project blog in the April 21, 2010 entry.
Friday, November 22, 2013
Friday, November 1, 2013
Wednesday, October 30, 2013
Tuesday, October 29, 2013
Monday, October 28, 2013
Tuesday, October 8, 2013
2711 East Lee Street
Why does this red-and-white mailbox have a post that's around ten feet high? The top reminds me of a place to hang flags or pennants. (If you know better, please leave a comment below or send me email.)
I spotted it (hard not to miss it!) on May 13th at 2711 E. Lee Street.
Update (June 19, 2019): Donna Reardon emailed us the story of this mailbox:
This is my childhood home I grew up and lived in for 18 years. My father made this mailbox and post. He was an certified welder and iron worker. The reason why it’s so high is that it was a light for the front yard. Of course the light on the top is long gone. It was pretty neat in the 1960’s. We didn’t have any street lights and the yard was very dark.
Thank you, Donna!
Friday, October 4, 2013
Another box that rocks: 2209 North Tucson Boulevard
I'm back from a trip out of town (without my mailbox photos to post). But now the boxes are back!
On January 2, I posted a box that rox — actually, a mailbox on a pile of rocks. Here's one on a post (made of concrete?) that's (almost) covered with flagstone:
I unearthed it May 13th.
On January 2, I posted a box that rox — actually, a mailbox on a pile of rocks. Here's one on a post (made of concrete?) that's (almost) covered with flagstone:
I unearthed it May 13th.
Thursday, September 26, 2013
2602 East Mabel Street
Instead of putting your mailbox outside the wall around the front of your home, why not put it in the wall — so you don't have to go around to get your mail?
The owner of this mailbox did that. It's embedded in the stuccoed wall (and covered with stucco itself) next to a bright green and dark lavender gate. I rolled by (and stopped!) on May 13th.
The owner of this mailbox did that. It's embedded in the stuccoed wall (and covered with stucco itself) next to a bright green and dark lavender gate. I rolled by (and stopped!) on May 13th.
Monday, September 23, 2013
The other side of 2601 East Mabel Street
As I hinted in the previous entry (you can click there to see it), I've been very busy. So busy, in fact, that I didn't check to see if I'd taken a photo of the other side of that box.
I found it this morning, as I was about to do another post. Here's the other side of the same box, on May 13:
I found it this morning, as I was about to do another post. Here's the other side of the same box, on May 13:
Friday, September 20, 2013
Friday, September 13, 2013
608 Shattuck Street, Bisbee
Although this is the Tucson Mailbox Art blog, I can't resist a great mailbox anywhere (especially on Friday the 13th in 2013 :).
Gregg Townsend just surprised me with photos of this church-shaped mailbox in Bisbee... including teacups and saucers on the ground next to its post:
Is that an electricity-generating windmill over the steeple? Here's a close-up:
Whattabox! Thanks, Gregg.
Wednesday, September 11, 2013
Monday, September 9, 2013
The other side of 2903 East Toledo Place
Back on January 1, I posted a mailbox at 2903 East Toledo Place. But I only showed one side. I came back on May 13th and photographed the other side:
Though I normally don't show boxes with saguaro-shaped posts, the chile-shaped flag won!
Saturday, September 7, 2013
Wednesday, September 4, 2013
Monday, September 2, 2013
3346 East Arroyo Chico
Pots on mailbox posts are nothing unusual here in Tucson. This home, though (in the part of town just north of Reid Park, with large homes on curvy streets) had an unusual combination: a beautiful pot on a nicely-stuccoed post... and, next to it, a plain gray mailbox on a metal post.
Maybe it was under construction when I rolled by on May 13th? If you've seen the home since then and have an update, please leave a comment below or send me email. Thanks.
Sunday, September 1, 2013
648 East 8th Street revisited
This mailbox, with its dark sort-of-metallic blue and a couple of handpainted designs, has a multicolored fence around it. I stopped by to gawk on May 11th... but lost track of the photo above. (Instead, on May 18th, I posted a fuzzy photo enlarged from the photo of the fence. It shows the very top of the mailbox, but not very clearly.)
If you'd like to see the fence, it's on today's Tucson Murals Project entry.
Friday, August 30, 2013
Wednesday, August 28, 2013
Thursday, August 15, 2013
Friday, August 2, 2013
Wednesday, July 24, 2013
2906 East Lisbon Place (our 200th "post")
As I rode my bike around Tucson's (mostly) side streets back in 2012, looking for art on the walls of homes and businesses, I kept spotting creative mailboxes along the street. I started to think about posting some mural art along with a special mailbox.
But (of course) a mailbox isn't even close to flat! That gave me the idea for the blog you're seeing here: Tucson Mailbox Art. It didn't take long to hunt through the photos I'd taken of mailboxes in the past year or two and start this blog. The first entry, dated 12/12/12, showed a mailbox I'd snapped two days before.
I started taking photos of every “interesting” mailbox I found. (And, as time went by, I saw some mailboxes over and over again. Those went onto the new blog page boring mailboxes.)
Today — almost eight months later — we're at the two hundredth mailbox... as well as the 200th (post) “post.” (I apologize for that artless pun. :)
This “croc box” was hand-painted. As the homeowner told me that day, it came to Tucson from Florida.
Whattabox!
(By the way: If you click the Google Map link below, you'll see that this part of Lisbon Place runs north-south — even though the street sign said East Lisbon Place. Figuring out where you are on Tucson streets can be a challenge sometimes...)
But (of course) a mailbox isn't even close to flat! That gave me the idea for the blog you're seeing here: Tucson Mailbox Art. It didn't take long to hunt through the photos I'd taken of mailboxes in the past year or two and start this blog. The first entry, dated 12/12/12, showed a mailbox I'd snapped two days before.
I started taking photos of every “interesting” mailbox I found. (And, as time went by, I saw some mailboxes over and over again. Those went onto the new blog page boring mailboxes.)
Today — almost eight months later — we're at the two hundredth mailbox... as well as the 200th (post) “post.” (I apologize for that artless pun. :)
Finally ... The Box!
This “croc box” was hand-painted. As the homeowner told me that day, it came to Tucson from Florida.
Whattabox!
(By the way: If you click the Google Map link below, you'll see that this part of Lisbon Place runs north-south — even though the street sign said East Lisbon Place. Figuring out where you are on Tucson streets can be a challenge sometimes...)
Saturday, July 20, 2013
Friday, July 19, 2013
4511 East 30th Street
This red, white and blue fire hydrant looks as if it belongs here near the curb.
So what's a mailbox doing on top of it? Is it a used fireplug?
(I was going to suggest that the owner might also have made a deal with the Fire Department to put a mailbox on top of the pole. But then I realized that the top of the hydrant is where the on/off valve is located... and firefighters wouldn't want that blocked!)
I rolled by on my bicycle May 3rd.
Tuesday, July 16, 2013
515 South Avenida De Palmas revisited
Back on March 9, I posted a photo of this mailbox with a metal palm tree above it — both painted black — which I snapped mid-day on January 3rd.
On April 30th, I rode by that same box near sunrise. Here's what I saw on the 30th.
Thursday, July 11, 2013
119 South Irving Avenue
I'm back from vacation. On with the mailboxes!
This box has one of the chain posts that I usually don't show. It's the surroundings that make this light green mailbox special:
Next to the mailbox are two stylized wooden saguaros, also painted green (but a more-saturated version of the color).
The saguaros and mailbox are surrounded by a rock garden. It's a nice spot to drive by and admire just east of Randolph Park. (It's also a couple of blocks away from a very fun mural along Broadway, just east of Alvernon. (If you come east on Broadway from Alvernon, turn right at Longfellow and park to see the mural. Then drive south a block to Cooper, where little San Clemente Park is a pleasant place to sit. Go east on Cooper, then take the second left turn (north) onto Irving. This mailbox scene is half a block north, on the right.
Below are a Google Map of this little “tour”...
(if that map doesn't seem to show a short tour, try clicking here)
... and a closeup of the box:
Enjoy! (And welcome back to this blog.)
Thursday, July 4, 2013
1432 North Dodge Boulevard (or next door...)
Couldn't be finer for the Fourth of July! (Well, it could use some fresh paint.)
This box is next to the plain black box numbered 1432 N. Dodge, but I didn't see any other house number. I found it on May 30th.
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