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.

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:

Friday, September 20, 2013

2601 East Mabel Street

The Boxes Are Back after a break for (me) moving to a new home. This box is a great way to start (again):


It's white with green and black faces and eyes. I found it on May 13th.

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

1214 North Forgeus Avenue


Here's a mailbox design I haven't seen before. It's painted green, and the base is also painted: with flowers.

I spotted it on May 13th.

Monday, September 9, 2013

Saturday, September 7, 2013

2934 East 9th Street

On top of this brown mailbox is a quail cut from sheet metal:


I waddled by (quickly) on May 13th.

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

301 South Eastbourne Avenue


This black mailbox has a black scroll underneath. (There are more similar columns around the grounds.)

I was there on May 13th.

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

4113 East Valentine Place


This arch-shaped mailbox (at the right) has matching arches in the background.

I rode by (amazed...) on May 3rd.

Thursday, August 15, 2013

4218 East Valentine Street


This worn black mailbox has scrolls and loops in its post.

I spotted it on May 3rd.

(PS: I've been very busy recently, so I haven't posted as often as I usually would. I'm hoping that soon life will slow down enough to get back to the boxes!)

Friday, August 2, 2013

4360 East 32nd Street


This white mailbox has a handpainted house number and design. I found it on May 3rd.

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. :)

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

4602 East 32nd Street


This black box has a red outline and a (painted) spider spinning a web. I photographed it cautiously :) on May 3rd.

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”...


View Larger Map

(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.

Thursday, June 27, 2013

4010 East Palomar Drive

This handpainted silver and black mailbox has a crazy critter flag:


I took its photos on April 28th.

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

4012 East Cooper Street

It turns out that this mailbox — in a large white brick post with plants on top — isn't as unique as I thought it was when I snapped its photo on April 28th:


(As I've ridden my bicycle around Tucson, I've discovered a number of similar big posts with plants. This is one of the biggest! Still, I'm going to add “mailboxes with plants on top” to the “Not these mailboxes” list.)

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

4220 East Whittier Street


On April 28th, I flew by this black mailbox... with a lacy vine wrapped around it and a cardinal-shaped flag.

(By the way, you may have seen this box before. I originally posted it on June 19th. I've just moved it to appear on June 25th.)

Monday, June 24, 2013

4042 East Cooper Street


This black mailbox is surrounded by railroad gear... and there's a windvane on top!

I rolled by it on April 28th.

Sunday, June 23, 2013

4051 East Calle De Jardin


On April 28, I found this brown mailbox with three kinds of cactus (cut from a sheet of metal and painted white) on top.

Saturday, June 22, 2013

4032 East Calle De Jardin


This rusty black mailbox is mounted on an Oriental-looking (maybe Japanese?) post of brown with yellow panels inside.

I found it on April 28th.

Friday, June 21, 2013

Thursday, June 20, 2013

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

219 South El Volador


This house-shaped mailbox (complete down to — or, I guess, up to) its little chimney — could use some maintenance.

(I know a great house painter, by the way! Shameless plug there: Paint Masterz LLC is a client of mine.)

This is one of many creative mailboxes (and murals, and more) in this art-filled corner of Tucson.

(In case you don't recognize it, the red-orange box on the side is for newspapers.)

Monday, June 17, 2013

4202 East Calle El Centro


This mailbox is in a stuccoed post... and that's not unusual for Tucson. But it has two address plaques, in different styles... and that's unusual.

I rode around it, at 4202 East Calle El Centro, on April 25th.

Sunday, June 16, 2013

4260 East Calle De Madrid


This bright blue mailbox — which I found on April 25th — rests on three posts that remind me of something you'd see at a port or a dock. (I'm no sailor. Do you know the word for this type of arrangement? Please leave a comment below. You can remain anonymous if you'd like.)

(In case you're curious about the Sunday date on a post that appeared Tuesday morning: The last couple of days have been really busy. I'll try to catch up on posts today and tomorrow.)

Saturday, June 15, 2013

220 South Calle de la Azucena

This rust-colored mailbox has an unusual red flag. [If you've got a guess (or better) what it represents, please leave a comment below! (You can remain anonymous if you'd like to.)]


I spotted it April 25th on the northwest corner with Columbus & across the street from yesterday's box.

Friday, June 14, 2013

225? South Calle de la Azucena


What kind of contraption is that gray mailbox mounted on? I took a close-up that gave a clue:


When I did some searching for LDE New World Standard Series, I found a bunch of references to cream separators.

Here's one page from Doug & Linda's Dairy Antique Site that shows quite a few similar gadgets: Cream Separators Page 2.

It's in front of an unnumbered house on the southwest corner of Calle de la Azucena & Columbus. (Google Maps says the address there is 225, but I think it might be 227.) I found it on April 25th.

Thursday, June 13, 2013

4260 East Whittier Street


This white mailbox has a polished propellor as its "post." I flew past it on April 25th.

(By the way, this photo has no geotag. If you aren't used to locating something from its street address, just type that address into your search box.)

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

4220 East Timrod Street


The white mailbox has a black post with a disc and quail in the middle.

I spotted it on April 25th.

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

4236 East Marion Trail



Though the Native American-type design on this black mailbox looks to me like it might have been mass-produced, it's nicely done, isn't it?

The box was along my epic art-finding bicycle route on April 25th.

Monday, June 10, 2013

1125 South Longfellow Avenue



This red mailbox with lattice posts was the next one on my lucky art-finding ride of April 25th.

Sunday, June 9, 2013

114 South Calle El Centro



This gray mailbox is one of the strangest I've seen, with its angular post and some kind of critter on top. Any guesses what it is? (If you have an idea, please leave a comment below... you can remain anonymous if you'd like to.)

I discovered it April 25th.

Saturday, June 8, 2013

4240 East Cooper Street



On April 25th, I rode through the artsy neighborhood with this rust-finished mailbox. It has translucent numbers on top and a saguaro-shaped flag, as well as a unique scroll of partly-bent metal underneath.

Only in Tucson, eh?