Most modern pickups aren't exactly big on creativity. Looking back at trucks from the '40s and '50s shows how stepside and fleetside styles first took shape.
Back in the 1960s, trucks buyers starting demanding more from their workhorses, with these also serving as personal transport vehicles rather than simply being put to work. Six decades later, the ...
As a kid growing up in New York City, there just weren't many places to venture off pavement. OK, let's be honest, considering the entire city is pavement there were exactly zero places to go ...
Anyone looking at this brownie Stepside pickup truck would be excused for entering the first bar and asking for a couple of root beer drafts to check if the sweet beverage and the 1964 C10 are ...
Luis Lupercio was attending the Pomona Swap Meet with this 1951 Stepside when our web producer, Josh Ching, spotted it. Josh then approached him about the possibility of having it shot for the ...
As they say, they don’t make ‘em like the used to, but that hasn’t stopped enthusiasts from recreating their favorite vehicles using contemporary underpinnings. Case in point – this modern-day GMC ...
It's not just that this truck was built on the cheap that makes us insane with jealousy. Certainly, there have been scores of other trucks built for less. It's the fact that not only was this truck ...
Stepside,flareside,fenderside,utiline,thriftside, andsportside are all different names for basically the same type of truck,and we're here to explain. As the Bard from England would tell you, "A rose ...