Monday, August 3, 2020

Mailbox archive: 3221 East Glenn Street


You can't miss those huge house numbers! And the “Yes” flag is a fun addition.

I found this mailbox on June 12, 2013, but didn't publish the photos until today.

Monday, July 27, 2020

Mailbox archive: 3311 East Glenn Street



When I found this mailbox on June 12, 2013, the hand-painted flowers on both sides were faded by the sun. I wonder what it looks like seven years later?

I used my photo editor to zoom in on this side of the mailbox…


Here's the other side:


I haven't published the photos until today.

Monday, July 20, 2020

Mailbox archive: 3321 East Glenn Street



This mailbox has the house number in the post, one digit per circle — except that the last number, at the bottom, is missing. Since the whole thing is tilted at a crazy angle, I wonder if a car hit it?

I found this on June 12, 2013, but didn't publish the photo until today.

Monday, July 13, 2020

Mailbox archive: 3515 East Glenn Street




The sun is just over the hills in the cutout sheet of metal between these two posts. I took the photo on June 12, 2013, but haven't published it until now.

Monday, July 6, 2020

Slowing down for the summer

I've decided to head for the hills this summer — to Santa Fe. So I'm going to publish mailboxes once a week — every Monday — until I'm home in September. If I see a great mailbox in Santa Fe, I might publish it here too.

Stay cool this summer! And by the way, if you haven't seen all of the mailboxes since this blog started in 2012, look for the “Blog archive” in the right-hand column on a desktop (or tablet?)… or just keep scrolling down the list of blog entries, page by page.

Thursday, July 2, 2020

Mailbox archive: 2737/41/45/47 North Richey Boulevard


This group of four mailboxes has two lizards between the posts. I found them on June 12, 2013, but haven't published them until today.

Monday, June 29, 2020

Mailbox archive: 956 North Richey Boulevard




Here's a mailbox with a mosaic post showing the sun, a saguaro, and a coyote (or wolf?).


The two sides are different.
You might have noticed a strange pattern in the second view above. The mailbox has a series of horizontal lines. But, as I edited the photo, I noticed that it had striped patterns that changed depending on how much I zoomed in. Here's an example:


If you see something like that, it actually isn't real! (If you have nothing better to do, click on the second view and zoom in and out… you might see the patterns. How exciting. :)

I took the photos on June 12, 2013, but haven't published them until today.

Thursday, June 25, 2020

Mailbox archive: 3602 East 3rd Street




Another in our long-running series of mailboxes I photographed in 2013 but didn't post until now is this box with a cutout plant on a metal plate between the posts. I snapped the photo June 12, 2013.

Monday, June 22, 2020

Mailbox archive: 717 North Richey Boulevard




Someone went to a lot of work to make this elaborate flower “post” from nails and other cast-iron pieces!

I rolled by and stopped to gawk on June 12, 2013. I haven't published the photo until today. (By the way, I used my favorite free photo editor, GIMP, to select the flower and darken it.)

Thursday, June 18, 2020

Mailbox archive: 3444 East Calle Alarcon




Here's a handsome mailbox embedded in a post that's faced with what look like thin sheets of stone.

I discovered it on June 12, 2013, but haven't published the photo until now.

Monday, June 15, 2020

Mailbox archive: 3554 East Calle del Prado



I'm not sure what to call the design on the flag and under the mailbox. The one underneath looks kind of like an apostrophe to me. Whatever it is, it's interesting! (As always, you can click on the photo for a larger view.)

I stopped by and scratched my head on June 12, 2013, just down the block from the previous mailbox. I haven't published this photo until today.

Thursday, June 11, 2020

Mailbox archive: 3564 East Calle del Prado



This home has a mailbox with (metal) plants between its two posts…
… and the entrance to the home has a gate with the same design:

I stopped by here on June 12, 2013. I haven't published the photos until today.

Monday, June 8, 2020

Mailbox archive: 3942 East Guaymas Place



When I rode my bicycle past the home on May 28, 2013, I talked with the homeowner. The metal between the posts is recycled, she said.

I haven't published the photo until today.

Thursday, June 4, 2020

Mailbox archive: 3935 East Guaymas Place


I spotted this mailbox with a roadrunner on top May 28, 2013. I haven't published it until today.

Monday, June 1, 2020

Mailbox archive: 4204 East Holmes Street



A rusty plant climbs up the post and around the rust-finished mailbox in this photo from May 27, 2013. I haven't published it until today.

Thursday, May 28, 2020

Mailbox archive: 4525 East 26th Street



The flamingo by this mailbox post is a lot more tame than the lion a week ago. I found this a bit later the same day, June 3, 2013. I haven't published this photo until today.

Monday, May 25, 2020

Mailbox archive: 6201 East 26th Street

I found this flaming red, white and blue mailbox just after Memorial Day 2013: June 3rd. I haven't published the photo until today, Memorial Day 2020.

Thursday, May 21, 2020

Mailbox archive: 4533 East 26th Street



No one will dare steal mail from here. :)

I found this mailbox with a lion next to it on June 3, 2013. I haven't published it until today.

Monday, May 18, 2020

Mailbox archive: 4558 East 28th Street



Mounted on a tilted blue pole, one side of this mailbox has a scene that reminds me a bit of Taos Pueblo in New Mexico.

The other side is much less fun:


This is one of the mailboxes I found on June 3, 2013, but didn't publish until today.

Thursday, May 14, 2020

Mailbox archive: 4609 East 26th Street

Bet you can't miss the house number as you drive by this mailbox:


(The other side has the typical small paste-on numbers.) I found it on June 3, 2013, but didn't publish the photo until today.

Monday, May 11, 2020

Mailbox archive: 4669 East 26th Street


After groaning for a moment (I've seen enough smiley faces for a lifetime :), I stopped and snapped the photo on June 3, 2013. I haven't published it until today.

Thursday, May 7, 2020

Mailbox archive: 4809 East Andrew Street




No, I have no idea why. :)

I spotted this smashed mailbox, mounted sideways (parallel to the street), on June 3, 2013. I haven't published it until today.
Amazingly enough, a Google Maps Street View three years later — May, 2016 — showed that the box was still smashed:


Monday, May 4, 2020

Mailbox archive: 4901 East Andrew Street



Here's another in the series of photos I took years ago but didn't publish. I rolled by this mailbox on a wheel June 3, 2013.

Thursday, April 30, 2020

Mailbox archive: 4910 East Andrew Street

A sky blue mailbox with a two-color stripe:


The photo is from June 3, 2013. I haven't published it until today.

Monday, April 27, 2020

Mailbox archive: 4918 East Andrew Street

Here's a mailbox that looks to me as if it's by the same artist who painted the box across the street (see Mailbox archive: 4917 East Andrew Street):


It's another in the series of mailboxes that I snapped seven years ago (this one on June 3, 2013) but haven't published until now. The mailbox is signed SKay.

Thursday, April 23, 2020

Mailbox archive: 4917 East Andrew Street

The mailbox door was open when I rolled by on June 3, 2013:


Across the street is another mailbox in the same style. We'll see it next time.

Monday, April 20, 2020

Mailbox archive: 4933 East Andrew Street



This mailbox sits on some kind of galvanized metal tube. The photo is from June 3, 2013, but I haven't published it until today.

Thursday, April 16, 2020

Mailbox archive: 5657 East 26th Street



I snapped this photo of a mailbox in a pot with artificial flowers on June 3, 2013, but I haven't published it until today.

Monday, April 13, 2020

Mailbox archive: 5745 East 26th Street



Shining Light Baptist Church has this stuccoed post with a business-sized mailbox.

I photographed it on June 3, 2013, but haven't published it until today.

Thursday, April 9, 2020

Mailbox archive: 5836-5842 East 26th Street

Here's a nautical-looking yard as I found it on June 3, 2013:


Since then, the big tubes have been removed. Here's a Google Maps Street View from May 2018:

Monday, April 6, 2020

Mailbox archive: 1536 North Sahuara Avenue

A lavender mailbox with big white flowers:


I snapped the photos on June 3, 2013, but haven't published them until today.

Thursday, April 2, 2020

Mailbox archive: 5962 East 26th Street



This mailbox isn't special — lots of mailboxes are embedded in walls and posts — but the setting is. There's an arch shaped like a mailbox and pots of cactus all around.

I took the photo on June 3, 2013, but haven't published it until today.

Wednesday, April 1, 2020

(Not) April Fools: Mailbox crash tests


I kid you not. This photo is from a government-funded 1978 University of Texas research study, Crash Tests of Rural Mailbox Installations. Click there if you'd like to see the report.

Scroll through for photos of cute mailbox installations as well as bizarre shots of different vehicles the study used to hit mailboxes. But, to make sure this isn't a complete waste of your time, you might also want to read Appendix A, U.S. Postal Service Specifications for Rural Mailbox Installations. You'll learn, for instance, that if you don't have stamps to mail something, you can leave money in the mailbox and the carrier will take care of it for you. (That was 40+ years ago, at least, in 1978.)

Monday, March 30, 2020

Mailbox archive: 6111 East 26th Street

Both sides of this handpainted mailbox are covered with desert scenes. Even the flag has a desert scene:


I took the pictures on June 3, 2013, but haven't published them until now.

Although I didn't snap a photo, the mailbox is on a camshaft post. I don't normally show mailboxes on a camshaft post, but the art on the box won. Here's a Google Maps Street View from May 2016 showing the post:

Thursday, March 26, 2020

Mailbox archive: 6152 East 26th Street

The art in front of this home is a real family affair. The owner told me that her son made the wrought iron.


The flag looks to me like a crescent moon:


The quail along the fence are her children and grandchildren:


I rolled by this place on June 3, 2013. I haven't published the photos until today.