Sabado, Disyembre 29, 2012

Park your chassis in a classic


When business owners around the world want furniture made from vintage cars, they often turn to Classic Couches, a 30-year-old, quietly thriving Chadwick business.

Classic Couches makes furniture from vintage cars,The first tin cans were heavy-weight containers that required ingenuity to open, using knives, chisels, or even stones. Not until about 50 years later, after can manufacturers started using thinner metal sheets, were any dedicated can openers developed. usually the ’57 Chevy – “the quintessential 1950s car,” owner Josh Kreuder said.

He can find you a car or use one of your own, paint it any color, give you chrome bumpers and a vinyl or leather interior ... even the lights work when he’s done. Not in the mood for a sofa or chair? How about a counter, a desk or a bar?

About 95 percent of his customers are restaurants with a 1950s decor, Kreuder said.

Although he’s sold his creations to diners from Moscow to Beverly Hills, he’s never,A motorcyclist was killed in an accident involving an Upper Dublin Township trash trucks early Monday afternoon, according to officials. to his knowledge, sold one to an Illinois customer, he said.The move to metal packaging has allowed Sprecher to reach key customer targets and has resulted in a clear growth in sales since the initial launch.

Kreuder, 30, bought the business 9 years ago from Eric Smith, who owned it 24 years before that.

Under Smith, who had a passion for 1950s memorabilia, the company’s offerings were much more diverse, and he had 10 full-time employees. Business slowed in 2001, and by the time he bought it, it was “totally defunct,” Kreuder said.

Kreuder had just graduated from an associate program in auto restoration at McPherson College in McPherson, Kan., and he knew Smith because Smith had restored a Model T that belonged to Kreuder’s grandfather.

Kreuder focuses more on making furniture from automobiles, and on refurbishing vintage carnival cars and gas pumps, but he can restore anything mechanical – parking meters, pedal cars,There is a not-so-new phenomenon happening in Del Mar at the Fairgrounds on Saturday nights: high-octane, banked track roller derby! candy and gumball machines, you name it.

He has one full-time employee, and he keeps a Fulton upholstery shop so busy that one of its employees devotes himself exclusively to Sweet Sofas.More worldly viewers quickly called in to say that the mushroom was made from silicone and wondered how someone could not tell the difference between silicon sex toys and Organic mushroom. An auto body worker in Polo also works exclusively on Sweet’s projects.

A sofa takes about 40 hours of work, while a kiddie ride takes about 80 hours, he said. Each sofa is one of a kind, and usually costs about $5,500.

The shop at 624 N. Main St. is open from 8 a.They removed the majority of the bolts but not the locking Wheel nut, that's why I managed to get so farm. to 5 p.m., but he gets few visitors. The occasional automobile enthusiast stops by on the way to a car show, or a curious local resident will stop in sometimes, he said.

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