Sunday, May 30, 2010

Bullet Planter Reloaded

Last year I picked up this broken fiberglass bullet planter for pretty cheap because it had a bad break on the bottom that needed patching, and the whole thing needed sanding and repainting.  Before winter hit, I cleaned and painted the iron legs, but by the time I picked up the patching materials I knew I needed, it was almost winter and too cold to patch since the stuff lets off one heckuva bad smell as it cures so doing it inside was not an option.




 I haven't worked with fiberglass repair before, but I already had some fiberglass fabric mesh and I picked up a small can of the repair patch.  It's a two-part mix, and actually mixes a lot like automotive filler, and you can find it at auto parts stores.  You just follow the directions to add some hardener to this jelly and mix well.




I sanded along the edges of the broken area's and knocked down the couple layers of paint that had been used on it over the years.


On the inside bottom I found the Kimball trademark stamping, but I knew it would have to be sacrificed to patch the breaks.

Next I cut a piece of the fabric mesh and cut some notches along the sides of the mesh so it would conform better to the bullet shape. You can also buy this stuff at auto parts stores.  It's usually sitting near the auto body bondo patch kits.

Once I got the fabric the way I wanted it, I mixed and applied the patch.  It spreads like peanut butter.  I then added the fabric mesh and coated over it with more of the patch. It dries in less than 30 minutes, and gets rock hard.  Once the inside patch had hardened,

 I cut a couple of small pieces of fabric and repeated the process along the edges of the cracks still visible on the bottom of the outside.

Then I used some very coarse sandpaper (80 grit, but 40 would have been even better) to knock down the rough edges of the patch. Your goal when spreading the patch is to get it as smooth as you can before it hardens, so there's less sanding to do to smooth out everything later.

I limited my sanding to the outside only and saved myself some time.  Since the inside will be covered with dirt, I figured I would save the effort for other projects.  It's not like you can read the embossed Kimball seal anyway since it's covered up.

Outside of planter with rough sanding almost done.

Outside bottom of planter sanded, giving it an appearance similar to the top of my head.

With the outside sanded well all over, all I had to do was pick the right paint color. 


I already had a can of red paint for painting plastic, and the directions say it also works on fiberglass. Sweet, here we go!


Looks pretty good.  We picked up some cacti (cactuses?) to plant in this reloaded bullet.


Cacti are planted, now (I'm told by SWMBO) we just need to add some sedum and it's done!

8 comments:

  1. You did a great job and it looks incredible--red was the perfect color. My husband LOVES bondo and I do too since a couple years ago while attempting to pull in next to his freshly restored 67 'GTO in a pouring rainstorm my car slid, very gently but very firmly, smack into the GTO's quarter panel. I immediately got hysterical but he said NO PROBLEMO: BONDO!! He fixed it good as new.

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  2. This looks absolutely perfect! Thanks for sharing an excellent how-to, too! This helps me get motivated to repaint mine, it has a few scuffs and rust on the legs that makes it look just old enough in a baaad way :P

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  3. The planter looks AMAZING red looks like the perfect choice.

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  4. Now that's a tutorial! I have a similar but not bullet fiberglass planter that needs a patch on a crack. Now I know what to use. Shoot, I even have bondo in the shed! Yours turned out faboo.

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  5. Hope it helps someone, it's really not too hard or time consuming. Sanding is tedious though.

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  6. Wonderful tutorial! Bondo does the trick and your choice of red is my choice too; it's a favorite color. Yeah for something old is something new and it's all because of you! ;) Pam @ Sallygoodin

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  7. Thank you so much for sharing this how-to!! Now all I need to do is find a cracked bullet planter on the cheap!

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