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From 1983 through 1986, the automaker made a LeBaron Town & Country convertible with (not real) wood-grain panels running nearly the car's entire length. Chrysler wasn't content to just slap some ...
It’s a 1985 Chrysler LeBaron Town and Country convertible, the one most of us know from when “Back to the Future” was still in theaters, complete with faux wood paneling. This has strong ...
The brand showed off the coolest vehicles of its past at the party while anticipating the future: A new Chrysler vehicle is coming.
Fiat Chrysler (FCAU) is bringing back the Jeep ... automaker will also resurrect the vehicle's iconic (though fake) wood panel design known as a "woodie," or in the Wagoneer's case, "the Woody." ...
Chrysler has a solution to decisively broaden the appeal with the new 2012 300 S. The S models are stripped of bright chrome and wood ... leather on the instrument panel and cluster brow, center ...
Some enterprising types added aftermarket wooden panels to give a car a ... chassis like steel and then apply wood paneling for the exterior. (The Chrysler Town and Country was among the popular ...
But even when it was just used as a stylistic flourish, as was the case with the iconic and long-running Chrysler Town & Country, outfitting vehicles with genuine wood planking was a costly and ...
After Chrysler established you could make modern, streamlined, steel station wagons, making the sides of your car out of wood became more of a sign of old fashioned class than anything else.
Nostalgia is in! For the last couple of years, Detroit's manufacturers have been looking to the past for certain new car designs, and the public has been spending more money to make their rides ...