Those seat belts can easily be restored to their intended color. Just invest the $2.49 for a bottle of Rit Dye! It's available at any WalMart and many other stores. I re-dyed the blue seat belts on my '71 Imperial earlier this year (along with the door panel carpets). I simply mixed some of the dye with hot water in a generic spray bottle and went to work. It was MUCH easier than I had expected and turned out great. Elijah --- Rog & Jan van Hoy <vanhilla@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > I think the black die fades as they get older. > > I don't think many new car buyers would accept > blue-green seat belts in their luxury cars. > > --Roger van Hoy, '55 DeSoto, '42 DeSoto, '66 > Plymouth, '81 Imperial, Washougal, WA > ----- Original Message ----- > From: jsadowski > To: mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > Sent: Wednesday, July 24, 2002 11:05 PM > Subject: Re: IML: Seat belt surprise > > > I think thats just the way they did it back then. > My 69 has black seats & dark green belts.I've seen > many other Mopars around that era with black seats & > having green belts. > John > ----- Original Message ----- > From: Billimp68@xxxxxxx > To: mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > Sent: Monday, July 22, 2002 4:04 AM > Subject: Re: IML: Seat belt surprise > > > Tim, > > Speaking of Imperial Seat Belts, the Chrysler > employee who installed these belts must have been > color blind. One of my 68 Crown Coupes, which has a > gray exterior and a black interior, has blue green > seat belts. > > Bill/Imp, 68's > __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Yahoo! Health - Feel better, live better http://health.yahoo.com