Keep On Truckin T-Shirts
Description: Popular seventies saying Keep on Truckin’. Show your love of that generation to your family members and friends.
Keep on Truckin’ 1970s Yellow Vintage Retro T-Shirt
by MasArt Designs
$16 $23
Description: Awesome USA patriotic American flag themed big rig semi truck tractor trailer with retro sunset and the cool phrase Keep on Truckin’ illustrated by Jeff Hobrath.
USA Patriotic Keep on Truckin Retro Big Rig Semi-Truck T-Shirt
by hobrath
$16 $23
Description: Let's be honest here - a lot of kookie stuff came out of the '70s, and looking at some of it now, it's not really as cool as it is weird. Such is the case with this 'Mother Trucker' design, which features a funky dude with a case of foot rot getting ready to put the moves on a female passerby.
Description: It means "Keep on Keeping On..." Strut your way no matter what - Don't sweat the little shit. idiom informal. to continue to do something that is ordinary and boring: "How's work going?" "Oh, okay. I just keep on trucking." SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases.
Keep on Truckin - cmyk w Stars and Disco Ball x 300 T-Shirt
by Military Insignia Clothing and Products
$16 $23
Description: In 1974, then-publisher of Street Rodder and Street Chopper magazines, Tom McMullen, saw a growing trend in custom vans and pickups cruising Southern California and making the scene at hot rod shows. Using the popular saying "Keep on Truckin'" as a basis, Truckin’ magazine was created. In 1975, the first issue went on sale at newsstands for $1.00 under the TRM Publications (which stood for Tom and Rose McMullen) family of auto magazines. From 1975 to May 1995, Truckin’ was published by TRM before being sold off to a larger media group after Tom and his wife died when their Rockwell Commander 112 crashed into a field in Oklahoma. The title changed hands a few more times over the years before going digital and finally ceasing in 2019.
Description: Before there was a mouse, there was a rabbit, and his name was Oswald. Oswald the Lucky Rabbit was created in 1927 by Ub Iwerks for WDC. This familiar-looking rabbit was a precursor to the anthropomorphic rodent that would become known worldwide, but had the distributor of Oswald's earliest cartoons not surreptitiously claimed the rights to the character, guests at the most magical place on earth would be welcomed by a rabbit and not a mouse...
Description: This funny, cool, and awesome T-shirt is perfect for those who love games, movies, fantasy, memes, adventure, creating things, restaurants, and fast food. It features a chubby, funny guy holding a fried chicken.
Game Explosive Creature - Block Movie Gift T-Shirt
by studiomootant
$16 $23