Tiki Central / Collecting Tiki / A Collection of Cannibals
Post #674159 by Bay Park Buzzy on Fri, Apr 12, 2013 12:32 AM
BPB
Bay Park Buzzy
Posted
posted
on
Fri, Apr 12, 2013 12:32 AM
The hardest part I guess I have with accepting your theory fully on the non Tahitian manufactured origin of these, is that for it to be true, then there couldn't have been a lathe in use in all of Tahiti. And that just seems too improbable to me. It would also have to entirely discredit Tahiti as having their own wood manufacturing economy altogether. My counter argument: Lathes, in one mechanical form or another, were already widely in use for hundreds of years. It wouldn't make sense for there not to be any lathes in use in Tahiti. If they were working with wood there, then they would have had access to those tools for a long time by then. My opinion on the execution of the carvings of these pieces on a lathe: My final thought: Thinking that the pieces were made by another wood-item manufacturing country solely based on the tool marks, seems to ignore many simpler and practical explanations. An open call to all of TC to help us finally get to the bottom of this. I've been thnking about this crap for years... Does anyone out there have one of these with the original manufacturer tags or price stickers? How about an old dated tourist photo with dozens of these lined up in Tahitian flea market. maybe an old ebay listing with a verified factula account of their origin. Any of those would help....Anyone? Buzzy Out! |