Flintstones Car Seat Covers

With Burning Man less than two weeks away my buddy Aaron and I are getting close to completion. All the finish work adds up but its the most exciting part. All the details are what makes this car authentic. Just recently Aaron finished rounding and staining the canopy supports and I finished rewiring the thing. All the seats are now upholstered and I just finished painting on the faux stone on the car. In the picture above you can see that we now working the side logs what I think we have figured out. Below you can see all the switches and lights. We hollowed out bones to cover the switches and shells cover the indicators but glow at night. For more pictures check out my Flickr page. Categories: Burning Man, CarsA big Thank you! to everyone around the world who has stopped by for a visit. And now, the first post in two years! I hope I remember how to do it! All 21 pictures of the View-Master packet The Flintstones (B514). Click on the image for a bigger picture. Fred Flintstone’s shopping trip for Wilma ends in a fight with his pal, Barney Rubble.

Luckily, Dino, their pet dinosaur, ends the war over the missing Brontosaurus steak. Our Stone Age hero solves the problem of getting to work on time with an amazing invention. Flying reptiles and a Mammoth add excitement to his first trip.
Where To Buy Sushi Grade Fish In CtWhen Wilma wants to learn how to drive the family car, a Stonebaker 2, Fred offers to teach her.
House Sale SteetonLittle things like driving between the legs of a Tyrannosaurus change his mind.
Pergo Laminate Flooring SuppliersThe driving school has the perfect solution for beginners. A million years ago, give or take a hundred centuries, right smack in the middle of the Stone Age, the people of Bedrock struggled for existence much as we do today. Quite a struggle it was, with Brontosaurus steaks up to 12 cents a pound, dinosaur eggs at $2.49 each, and a Republicrat named Stonefeller running on the “Ban the Axes” platform.

Undisturbed by such world-shaking problems, the common man of Bedrock, Fred Flintstone, drove to his neighborhood supermarket to shop. Fred had just parked his Stonebaker 2 when he saw his neighbor Barney Rubble. “Hiya, Barney, old Buddy,” cried Fred, “how’s your Rockswagon coupe grinding along these days?” “Fine, Fred, just fine,” Barney said. “Just had a new set of marble bearings put in and had the body rebarked. Doin’ the shopping for Wilma?” “Yeah,” Fred explained, “you know how it is, women can cook most things but when it comes to STEAKS, well, Freddy Flintstone does the choosing and cooking both. We’re eating ala ‘barbeque,’ tonight, and I’M doing the cooking!” “Me, too,” said Barney as Fred disappeared into the supermarket. In the meat department, Fred heard, “Good afternoon, Mr. Flintstone. Fancy seeing you here. “Wilma’s fine, Mrs. Rockbottom,” replied Fred, “the question IS how are the Brontosaurus steaks?” “That’s a good one you’re pointing at,” she said, “if you can afford the price.

Don’t touch that ichthyosaurus!” Fred whizzed through his shopping and drove home. “Wilma, Wilma!” he shouted, bursting into the kitchen, “get the charcoal red hot, we’re going to feast tonight!” Fred reached into the broken grocery sack, but the steak was gone. A wisp of a familiar aroma floated in the window. Someone’s cooking MY steak!” Rushing outside like a wounded rhinosaurus, Fred followed his nose across the backyard to the Rubble’s. There on the Rubble patio, Barney was cooking a Brontosaurus steak. “Hold on there, that’s my steak, old buddy,” Fred bellowed, vaulting the stone fence. “I’ll just thank you to hand it over!” “Leggo my steak, Fred,” Barney protested as Flintstone gripped one side of the steak and began to pull. “We’re friends with bowling and all that but you’ve no right to bust over here like this and try to snatch my meal!” “Give it back, Barney!” Fred demanded as the steak stretched dangerously. “I don’t care where you found this steak, it dropped out of my grocery bag and I’m getting it back!”

Before she could follow Fred, Wilma heard Dino, their pet dinosaur, at the front door. She opened it and began to laugh. “Dino, you found Fred’s steak. He must have dropped it on the way from the car. I’d better find him before he starts another neighborhood war!” When she reached the back fence, Barney had just given up. The wet, flabby steak snapped back and covered Fred’s head with a “kerplap!” “Watch what you’re doing, Barney,” Fred growled, “you’ll ruin my steak.” “Later, Wilma,” Fred said over his shoulder, “…now Barney, I’m really riled about…” “Later, I told you…now this steak of mine…” “Here is your steak, Fred Flintstone!” “Dino found it right by the car where you dropped it!” A red blush crept up Fred’s face. Sheepishly, he took the steak off his head and offered it to Barney. “Sorry, old pal, I thought—well, it was my mis-steak!” “If you are late one more time!” the foreman at the Bedrock Quarry had told Fred.

Fred answered, but that last five minutes every morning on his Beautyrock mattress was almost too precious to give up. “Yabba-dabba-doo, I’ve got it!” he told Wilma. “I’ll get to work on time and still be able to grab those forty winks in the morning!” For days the sound of the hammer and axe, of the swordfish and scissor-bill bird filled the Flintstone back yard. “What is it?” asked Barney. “I can’t figure it.” “A big mess of nothing,” Wilma snorted. “They laughed at Rockson P. Thongtiddle, too,” Fred replied, “but he went right ahead and invented the stone axe. If he’d let a few laughs discourage him we’d still be living in caves.” At last the day came; the invention was finished. And what were the memorable words uttered that historic morning by the wife of the famous inventor? For heavens sakes, Fred, you’re late. You’ll lose your job!” Before you behold my new invention—a flying machine that’ll whisk me to work in no time at all!” Fred leaped on the machine and started to pedal.

The leopard-skin blades overhead began to turn. “Fred,” Wilma wailed, “you’re not going to try to fly that fool contraption. “Ta, ta, my dear,” Fred waved and began to pedal furiously. With a grinding of stone gears, the helicopter rose from the ground. Fred yelled, “look out, Bedrock Quarry, here I come!” Swiftly over mountain and jungle he flew. Swooping down over a prehistoric palm tree, he passed the time of day with two baby flying reptiles in their nest. Someday you’ll be flying as good as me. A hideous screech behind him gave him a clue. Scram!” yelled Fred as the flying reptile landed on the helicopter blades. The machine lurched, then started whirling around and around. The poor glassy-eyed flying reptile was only too glad to let go. But it was too late. “Look out below!” shouted Fred as his helicopter fell toward the prehistoric jungle. Looking down he saw a wooly mammoth waiting with sharp curving tusks. “Holy Dodo bird! “With a careless wave of its trunk, the mammoth squirted what it took for a kind of flying bug.

The geyser of water shot Fred’s machine high into the air with such force that it completely disintegrated! Frantically, Fred grabbed the striped propeller shaft. The still-rotating blades acted like a parachute. Drifting with a strong wind, Fred floated over a granite ridge right into the open pit of Bedrock Quarry. “Hi, Mr. Shale,” he said, landing on the foreman’s desk. “Here’s your best Dinoscoop man!” The foreman pointed to his sundial wrist watch and said, “Humph! Another minute and you'd have been late. Get off my desk and get to work!” This looks so hard. I don’t think I can ever learn do drive,” Wilma said. “Maybe I’d better go to a driving school.” “Nonsense, Wilma, any dope can learn to drive… Er, that is ah—there’s nothing to it. C’mon, I’ll show you,” Fred said. “You won’t need this instruction slate, Wilma,” Fred said breezily as he tossed it away. “You’re in the hands of the old master, Freddy Flintstone—teacher par excellence!”

“I don’t know, Fred. This looks confusing,” Wilma said worriedly. “Maybe you’d better tell me what each of these things is for before we start.” “Nah, Wilma, this is just like swimming. Best thing to do is just jump in. Here, I’ll start the old Stonebaker up for yau and a-w-a-y we go!” Barney Rubble, the Flintstones’ neighbor, who was driving home from the market, suddenly realized Wilma’s car was headed straight for him. He swung off the road, narrowly missing a tree. “Why don’tcha watch where yer goin’, YOU ROAD HOG!” Fred yelled at the befuddled Barney. Fred was still muttering angrily to himself. Suddenly the car shot off the road. Fred was almost thrown out, but managed to grab the side of the convertible top and hang on as he hollered… Whow, we made it!” Fred looked back down the steep cliff and wiped his forehead. “Oh boy,” he groaned in relief. He swung around to Wilma. “Holy Dodo Bird Wilma, why … They were headed straight for a gigantic Tyrannosaurus.