Welcome to the Tiki Central 2.0 Beta. Read the announcement
Celebrating classic and modern Polynesian Pop

Tiki Central / Collecting Tiki / explain over-sized tiki wooden forks and spoons?

Post #128854 by FreakBear on Fri, Dec 3, 2004 3:46 PM

You are viewing a single post. Click here to view the post in context.
F

On 2004-01-15 08:31, SugarCaddyDaddy wrote:
The two explanations that I received from two different Filipino/Chinese families were:

  1. The symbolism means having good health and a prosperous family. The oversizing enhances that symbolism. The spoon and fork were symbols of good health since "food" would be the source for a healthy body (insert hamburger & fries jokes here). They also joked saying that Americans who display their "miniature spoon" collection would bring inauspicious fortune (from the small size of the spoons).

  2. The symbolism means family strength since the time that the family is actually gathered together is at meal time. Again, the oversizing is to emphasize that strength for all that visit the home to see.

In addition, I was told that it didn't matter if the size of your family was 1 or 10 (in the home), the symbolism of "family" was anyone who joined you in your dining area. Also, the spoon and fork was to be displayed near the dining table, traditionally the gathering place of the family.

Hope this helps.

Bollucks! These are a throwback from the days before the salad friendly "cherry" tomato was cultivated. Huge wooden implements were needed to deal with the unwieldy sandwich sized vegetables.
:wink:

I salivate whenever I see these. I have one set but I need more! I also have a matching serving bowl with identical tiki on the handle.