Hello Garage Journal. This forum has so much brilliance, I love looking at people's ideas to create something out of nothing.
I'm new here. I'm a college student. I've been rapidly becoming obsessed with DIY ideology. I thought I'd introduce myself by showing a recent project, tell me what you think.
Keep in mind that this was my first time doing a project of this type. I had plenty of beginner problems, such as wet-sanding through to previous layers. I also didn't know that acetone wasn't an acceptable degreaser between coats
1. Bought a beat up Craftsman toolbox from a thrift store for $15. This is the first tool box I have bought
2. Took out all the drawers and rails, tried to tighten things that were loose and loosen things that were tight. I put lps 2 on the slides. Anyone know a better slide lube?
3. Did my best to take the bends out of the sheet metal.
4. Started thinking of different ways to paint it. Got this idea that this tool box HAD to be red white blue. There was really no other option from this point forward but to DO IT.
5. Sanded (bought my first power tool for this step)
There was some pretty deep rust.
6. Primed. I drilled out the rivets for parts that would fall within the swath of my rattlecan. ( I now know that since I went to bare metal, I should've used self-etching primer.)
7. Made a star pattern and painted it on the top.
I just cut the stencil out of paper and used some stencil adhesive I found at the craft store. The paper was okay, but the adhesive sucked and my edges didn't stay put. This lead to horrible lines on my design... What is the right thing to use? I wanted to use some type of adhesive film, but was unable to acquire any. What is the right thing to use, Garagejournal?
8. more coming soon
I'm new here. I'm a college student. I've been rapidly becoming obsessed with DIY ideology. I thought I'd introduce myself by showing a recent project, tell me what you think.
Keep in mind that this was my first time doing a project of this type. I had plenty of beginner problems, such as wet-sanding through to previous layers. I also didn't know that acetone wasn't an acceptable degreaser between coats

1. Bought a beat up Craftsman toolbox from a thrift store for $15. This is the first tool box I have bought
2. Took out all the drawers and rails, tried to tighten things that were loose and loosen things that were tight. I put lps 2 on the slides. Anyone know a better slide lube?
3. Did my best to take the bends out of the sheet metal.
4. Started thinking of different ways to paint it. Got this idea that this tool box HAD to be red white blue. There was really no other option from this point forward but to DO IT.
5. Sanded (bought my first power tool for this step)
There was some pretty deep rust.
6. Primed. I drilled out the rivets for parts that would fall within the swath of my rattlecan. ( I now know that since I went to bare metal, I should've used self-etching primer.)
7. Made a star pattern and painted it on the top.
I just cut the stencil out of paper and used some stencil adhesive I found at the craft store. The paper was okay, but the adhesive sucked and my edges didn't stay put. This lead to horrible lines on my design... What is the right thing to use? I wanted to use some type of adhesive film, but was unable to acquire any. What is the right thing to use, Garagejournal?
8. more coming soon

