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ChuckM
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Sat, Aug 22, 2009 11:21 PM
There is an old Tiki-like carving I'm interested in fixing up; we purchased it directly from the carver in about 1969. It was soaked in Linseed oil for a few weeks before shipping it back home to California and has been sitting outdoors ever since for nearly half a century now. The statue has lost it's beautiful luster and has become rather grey, dry and brittle; even one of the fang-like teeth has become chipped.(I would like to post some pictures, but I have an Iphone right now and can't seem to post pictures with that at the moment.) My plan was to clean it up with some gentle soap such as Castile soap or Johnson's baby wash, possible using an old toothbrush of the crevices, and then to use Brazilian Rosewood Oil to give the wood some luster and protection. I'll probably leave the tooth as it is; not too sure about that. If anybody has any ideas, tips, suggestions or warnings, I would be very keen to hear them. Thanks for your time, ChuckM |
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hottiki
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Sun, Aug 23, 2009 12:25 AM
ok, what is "tikilike"?...things that could help: where is it from? who carved it? how big is large? are you sure of the wood type? that's along time outside with just a chipped tooth for damage...so the photos should show the bottom as well as the rest of it. for sure it would be good to know what you got before you go doing something crazy that will kill it. good luck chuck... |
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ChuckM
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Sun, Aug 23, 2009 2:07 AM
Wow, quick reply, thanks! We got this cool carving in a small village a day's journey north of Baguio City, in a hilly area of North Luzon in the Phillipines, in 1969. I am under the impression that places like the Phillipines and Indonesia fall outside of official "Tiki territory", but this statue seems to have a few things in common with the more classical Tikis, both in appearance and possibly in the use or purpose of the carving. What happened was this truck pulled into town with these two tremendous carvings on the back, and as a lark my father began bargining with the carver in sign language and pidgen English to buy them . That's pretty much it as far as where it came from and who carved them. I'm fairly sure that they are Mahogony; carvings were typically made of Mahogony there in those days- it was not in short supply in those jungles in the late 60's. It's actually a huge mask, some four foot high maybe two feet wide (the mask is not here as I write this, but you've got me motivated to go pick it up tomorrow!) perhaps the mask shape allowed water to run off better than a more typical figure would, and the mahogony was resiliant enough to survive the decades, I certainly hope so. |
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hottiki
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Sun, Aug 23, 2009 9:01 PM
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ChuckM
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Mon, Aug 24, 2009 3:40 PM
You're right about the mask and that's pretty impressive! However, this mask is quite a bit older then the photo you had(still unable to post pics here; emailed you one though...) so it's sort of a precursor, just a slightly different style. I had not considered the patina to be desirabled until you suggested that; do you still think so after looking at it? Thanks, Chuck |
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hottiki
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Mon, Aug 24, 2009 9:34 PM
Chuck: Just checking as to mention of email, I have not gotten anything anywhere....then again it's only been six hours.... |
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hottiki
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Tue, Aug 25, 2009 12:26 AM
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ChuckM
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Thu, Aug 27, 2009 4:24 PM
Thanks for posting those pictures. I thought I would pick up that carving days ago, but there's been lots of distractions this week. To answer your question, we lived in Subic Bay in the Phlippines for a number of years in the late 1960's. Pretty far removed from Woodstock, sort of the other end of the spectrum! One good thing was that we got to travel quite a bit; we were on our way to visit some famous rice terraces when we found those masks, for example. That whole area was quite different fourty years ago, I've gone back dozens of times in the last couple of decades but the world is much smaller now and even a remote island like Koh Pha Nga (where the movie "The Beach" was set) has a Seven-11 and Internet cafes! Anyway, I'll try to pick up the mask and post some pic soon, really appreciate the advice and the dialog, thanks, Chuck |
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hottiki
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Fri, Aug 28, 2009 12:28 PM
Just a P.S. to the refinishing of the carving. Showing a couple of examples of carvings left in antiquated state and some that designers try to make look old. |
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ChuckM
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Fri, Aug 28, 2009 12:56 PM
Wow, the picture of the two older Tikis really looks great; I'm more and more sold on your idea about leaving the finish alone. Although of the handles you experimented with, you have to admit that the finished one looks prettier and might appeal to more people more than the unfinished one in a sort of a commercial sense, the patina on the older Tikis is beautiful and it would be a travesty if someone was to come along and refinish them! Another point in your favor is that once that surface is altered, there's no turning back; I don't have several decades to wait for it to age again. I'm really glad that I asked this question and I really appreciate your input and ideas! Thanks again, Chuck |
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hottiki
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Tue, Sep 15, 2009 10:10 PM
[ Edited by: hottiki 2009-09-15 22:14 ] [ Edited by: hottiki 2015-10-14 06:21 ] |
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