Monday, August 21, 2006

It has to be love. Once I saw vintage travel trailers decorated by Sisters on the Fly I was hooked. It was a Cowgirl festival at the Farm at South Mountain in Phoenix April 2005. The wood interior gave a warm cozy glow that is irresistible. Each trailer had its own charm with horse shoe curtain rods, cowgirl fabric quilts and cute pillows. That was the start of my obsession with vintage travel trailers and the reason for this blog.

It has to be love. Hundreds of hours have been spent removing brown flat house paint from the exterior, refinishing a wood interior covered with pigmented stain and lifting first dirty carpet and then asbestos laddened tile from the floor. The entire siding has been removed to reveal rotted wood and then wood, insulation, electric and gas copper line replaced. New cushions and curtains were made. Accessories were located at garage and estate sales every weekend and other parts were gathered as gifts for birthdays, mothers day and Christmas. The pictures tell the story.

8 comments:

jean313 said...

Paulette,
This is AWESOME. Congratulations on your achievement. I'll have to stop over to see it in person one of these days.

Jean M.

Unknown said...

Wow who would have thought the trailer could look that good and on top of that a grandma with a blog site! When do you want colin to sleep over??

Big John said...

What did you clean your lights with. Did you remove all the paneling?

Renee said...

I absolutely love it! It's amazing what we gals can achieve when we put our minds to it.
I am a SOTF as well. And I enjoy seeing the ladies trailers. Everone is so creative.
Thank you for showing us all your hard work.

matchbox20girl said...

Hi! I'm another Shasta girl blogger..just wanted to let you know that your blog has been a source of inspiration for me...I've been discouraged time & time again during my Shasta project, but often times I'd pop in here to see that another gal did it, and you inspired me to keep on trying! I still have a long ways to go..but thanks for sharing your experience with us!

Kim

Claire said...

Great Job. I went to a SOTF show at Tybee Island Ga and got the fever again. I has a Li'l Beaver Camper years ago, we use to take 2 of our grandsons camping in it. They are now 25 & 21. I decided to see if I could find the Beaver and after several months located it. I got it back and just started the restoration on it. I am also a Interior Decorator and am able to do the upholstery and sew all that is needed. I am leaving it Brown & white on the outside and it will be called "Nuttin but Monkey Business" and done in teal & brown decor to be monkeys,hibiscus flowers, banana palms & coconuts. I am very excited and will try to start a blog soon, I am not as good at that as the decorating so that may be a bigger challenge. I also have a 1963 Scotty that I got before I knew that I could get the Beaver back, needless to say it has taken a back seat to my "pet project"
Thanks for the inspiration and hope to see you at a rally.
Claire
Tybee Island Ga

Q said...

WoW! You are my long lost twin... lots of stuff similar in my life also from your profile.
Anyhoo, Love your photos!! Show us more!!! I, Just today bought a 1972 Toyota GoTagALong, got it for $100. Can't wait to dig in...it is in similar but a little better condition than yours was. Hope mine will look as good as yours when finished! Show us more! Suz

Savannahkoka said...

How did you get all the paint off the trailer???? We just got a 1955 Anderson and latex paint was also used on it and we have tried many different things but keep on striking out.. Please help!!!

Sisters on the Fly

Sisters on the Fly
I fell in love with vintage trailers.

Cowgirl all the way.