
I was cruising around Amazon and found the above tonight. While it’s certainly not as cool as a real vintage box, you can’t beat the price… And it’s perfect for a project box.

I was cruising around Amazon and found the above tonight. While it’s certainly not as cool as a real vintage box, you can’t beat the price… And it’s perfect for a project box.
The Prairie School architects of the late 19th and early 20th century were the great visionaries behind the architectural movement of integrating nature and landscape with a building or home. The idea that a home could have more open interior spaces, a visual connection between the indoors and outdoors, horizontal lines, and indigenous materials, made the original Prairie School architecture extremely popular for a brief time in the Midwest. Among these great architects were more notably Louis H. Sullivan, and later Walter Burley Griffin and Frank Lloyd Wright.

Given the popularity of GarageArt.com’s last installment of oil & gas history, we decided it might be a good idea to let them go at it again. This time, Steve takes us through the history of one of my favorite – the Mobil Pegasus.
Through the years we’ve had some pretty amazing articles pop up here on The Garage Journal. The following is just a few of them:
Love the prices of discount tool houses, but not the quality? Learn which cheap tools make the grade and which don’t right here.
Have a typical two-car garage and want to use it as effinciently as possible? You’ve come to the right place for ideas. Check it out.
Our favorite work shop in the world… You can’t buy cool and you can’t by atmosphere. Nimrod proves it!
Need space to hold Bavarian’s finest? No sweat. Just follow this build from start to finish for some incredible ideas. Check it out.
It’s huge, gorgeous, and almost done… Check it out here.