
If you want something you don’t see, please message us, we’re always happy to help! Thank you so much for shopping with us here at ! We have vinyl graphics, stripes and decals for Challenger years 2008, 2009, 2010-2011-2012-2013-2014-2015-2016-2017-2018 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, with more to come, all the time. View our listings to see all of our cutout options. You won’t be disappointed with any decals on our site! Everything is made to order, with your color and cutout option, We have many great text cutout options in our stripes like Dodge, Challenger, Mopar, Hemi, Hellcat, SRT, RT, Scat Pack, Rumble Bee, just to name a few. We offer this great, American, classic, muscle car many types of kits, from rally sport stripes, to side rocker graphics, and everything in between. With more styles and designs to count, we are always working to build our catalog of Dodge Challenger stripe kit options.

We sell vinyl graphics for all areas of this unique vehicle, from hood graphics, to side stripes, and trunk decal stickers. Here at Elevate Graphics we offer, a great collection of automotive OEM style vinyl graphics, stripe kits, decals and stickers for the Dodge Challenger. And that's better than rotting away somewhere in the woods.Information On Dodge Challenger Graphics, Stripes, And Decals. All told, this Ford's spirit will live on in a different car. Sure, a production run of about 121,000 units doesn't make it rare, but Ford sold more than 500,000 examples in 1965 and over 600,000 Mustangs in 1966.īut even though it won't make it back on the road, this Mustang will donate some parts to an ongoing project. Even if 1964 Mustangs are rarer than the versions that followed. The car is simply too far gone, and a restoration wouldn't make sense financially. So is this 1964 Mustang getting a second chance at life? Sadly, the answer is no.
#Muscle car stripes series#
The series was very popular then and could explain this beat-up Ford's appearance. The livery reminds me a bit of late 1960s SCCA Trans-Am cars. So perhaps it was just a way to customize a pony to look like a race car. The owner shared that he painted it green and added the white decals but didn't mention racing it. It turns out the Mustang was originally white and had a 289-cubic-inch (4.7-liter) V8 under the hood.

Our host managed to get some info on the car from a previous owner following a post on social media. However, no signs of race-specific upgrades such as a roll-cage or suspension modifications exist. It almost looks like a race car that's been abandoned when its motorsport career ended. Finished in a shade of green that wasn't common on Mustangs in 1964, it sports International Paper decals on the rear fenders and white stripes on the roof and the C-pillars. In this case, I'd say the chrome trim, the driver-side door, and the trunk lid are among the very few components that could be sourced for a Mustang project. It's the kind of classic worth saving only for a handful of parts.

This means it sat for 48 years, which pretty much explains the terrible condition it was found in.Īnd by "terrible," I mean severe rust issues, a missing passenger door, no engine and transmission, and an interior loaded with drivetrain parts and junk.
#Muscle car stripes license#
I have no idea why this Ford was abandoned for good, but it was last driven in 1975, according to the license plate.

Much like millions of Chevy Tri-Fives were junked in the 1960s after only a decade on the road (or at the drag strip). Simply because 1960s Mustangs weren't viewed as classics in the 1970s. Why would anyone leave a prized classic to rot away like that? Well, it may be unthinkable in 2023, but it wasn't all that strange 50 years ago.
