It only seems like I'm getting good at it because you can't look close, and I make sure to take my photos with that in mind ;-).
The only things really interesting on this were the grill, Tool box, and various fasteners I made. The grill was "missing teeth" as Kim put it and that gave me a chance to practice my novice TIG work. It's amazing with 22 gauge sheet metal, how you can strike the tiniest arc and build a small pool that will let you weld in those delicate missing strips into that perforated sheet metal. I made the two left mounts and put in 3 custom strips to fill the missing steel. Took some grinding to make it look good, but it's passable, and I'm feeling bolder with the TIG now.
The tool box was shot and I tossed in the scrap bin, but she wanted to keep as many of the original pieces as possible, so I welded in half the bottom, back and end, fortunately none of the parts that you can see when it's installed.
Lastly I bored out carriage bolts on the lathe for the fender lights, hard to find items and it didn't take long. Only fun thing left is to make the rear work light mount, I have the pattern but while it's easy to cast, it's hard to shape from steel. Going to try and make a reasonable facsimile. If that fails, I'll have my son 3D print one and we just won't tell anyone it's plastic ;-).
Grill Before:
Grill After:
Tool Box Before:
Tool Box in process (the final repair is obvious when you open it, I'll be gluing rubber sheets in the bottom, back and sides, don't want stuff clattering in the tool box anyway, right ;-)), I didn't shoot an after picture:
I tried like heck to find those light bolts in a larger size, because the base of her light shells had expanded over the years. So I had to dust off the lathe (after 20 years inactivity). No precision here, just a drill bit, but it worked fine: