I often visit junk yards to pick up bikes to rescue and restore...while doing this I found buried under a car body this cute kid scooter frame with no wheels and the forks rusted solid with bent bars, I also picked up a few BMX restores. Having kids at home, why not save this scooter? Anyhow this scooter came with 7 inch wheels looking at the fork size. So first things first I went with 12 inch shoes. So this meant stretch the frame a total of 10 inches to take on the bigger wheels. Because it was made for smaller kids I also raise the height of the scooter by 4 inches. Below are photos of the process, I'm not done with it yet, but I went Jack Skellington.
Be back with more photos....
![33947_128115330700281_951249456_n_zpscbd20664.jpg](https://proxy.imagearchive.com/b24/b24fe410cf6ca6231b39d59873648999.jpg)
![538356_128422034002944_1058057866_n_zps80ddd92e.jpg](https://proxy.imagearchive.com/b6e/b6e96c5255baa0e84a67789e2bce03dc.jpg)
![223561_128422020669612_799223526_n_zps10f592cd.jpg](https://proxy.imagearchive.com/18e/18e9cd500ed2aa63c1c94d106f0fc2ec.jpg)
![581268_128428924002255_1260353035_n_zpsfc565602.jpg](https://proxy.imagearchive.com/c51/c511575aaa8271324c624d7b50ef3dda.jpg)
![525066_128489637329517_2088141448_n_zps2ae70f30.jpg](https://proxy.imagearchive.com/a1a/a1abc8ece33631139f1851742f395acb.jpg)
Be back with more photos....