Tiki Central / Home Tiki Bars
What do you "look for" in a home bar?
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Keaka-tiki
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Wed, Apr 20, 2016 3:05 PM
Aloha Ohana! |
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Keaka-tiki
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Thu, Apr 21, 2016 12:58 PM
With out the ramble. |
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Hakalugi
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Thu, Apr 21, 2016 2:47 PM
A-Frame roof jutting out at an angle with a hanging fish float light. Here are a couple of outdoor home Tiki bars for inspiration: RINCON ROOM: QUEEN KAMEHAMEHA'S |
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tikiskip
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Fri, Apr 22, 2016 6:21 AM
ramble, every tiki bar needs ramble if you ask me. But more to your question, would guess you have seen this... "I'm hoping someone has some fresh awesome ideas that I haven't come up with yet!" For outside I say HUGE rocks in the deck. Tiki is all about natural, wood, rope and bamboo, maybe a pond ect... This is grungy tiki or you could say old school. Pretty tiki is altogether different, Don't fire me but pretty tiki is not really a style I like and not a fantasy land like old school tiki. |
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tikiskip
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Fri, Apr 22, 2016 6:40 AM
One more thing. Got to get the bones of your space right before you throw a bunch of tiki in your yard. Heck that's free. |
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Keaka-tiki
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Fri, Apr 22, 2016 8:32 PM
Thanks so much! Haka those images are really something to strive for. I like that moody ambiance. Skip, man every time I see you post it's solid gold. Thanks for the ideas. My mid century obsession runs as deep as my tiki one. I'll go digging through some of my old design boss. For some reason I hadn't even thought of it. |
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4WDtiki
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Fri, Apr 22, 2016 8:38 PM
Actual tikis, lots of them! |
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tikiskip
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Fri, Apr 22, 2016 8:47 PM
For sure you want those. Get the bones right and it will all look better. Glad I could help, if I did indeed help. Good luck! |
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Keaka-tiki
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Sun, Apr 24, 2016 11:55 AM
Yeah! I've got two big tikis 3'and 4' respectively that were done a while ago by a local carver. |
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VampiressRN
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Sun, Apr 24, 2016 2:11 PM
What Hakalugi said PLUS big Tikis. I don't have to drink out of a Tiki mug, I actually prefer to drink from a clear glass to see the loveliness of the cocktail. I want 3 things if possible. |
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AkronTiki
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Fri, Jun 17, 2016 9:01 AM
As others have said, collections are nice…tikis, lights, decorations…my wife loves decorative candles, and we use a LOT on and around the bar, with torches generally out in the yard and around the pool. I also like to see some personal items, especially framed photos of the owners, or images of places they have been, hanging in the space. I have some framed photos of myself surfing and on surfboards in the water at Waikiki with my daughter, some mounted postcards from places we’ve been, like Duke’s and Trader Vic’s. I also frame and hang some smaller posters from beaches we’ve visited, like Huntington Beach and Palm Beach. It’s a little nostalgic and always inspires conversation. Unless you’re printing with special UV-resistant inks, we generally expect to re-frame and reprint these every year or two; dampness (it rains here in Ohio) will get to them eventually, too - but it’s no big deal to kick out another copy and stick ‘em back in the frame. [ Edited by: AkronTiki 2016-06-17 09:02 ] |
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EnchantedTikiGoth
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Fri, Jun 17, 2016 11:13 PM
I'm a big fan of themed spaces myself... That is, physical space as a medium for interactive storytelling. Your basic Tiki bar as a collection of Tiki ephemera with the adequate amount of bamboo and thatch and statuary is fine. There is nothing whatever wrong with that, but there's also a sameness to it. It's easy to collect photos of the cool things other people have done, make a checklist, and come up with a sufficiently Tiki bar. But to me, standout examples that I've seen have a motivating logic or story behind them that pulls it together, making it more than "my collection of Tiki stuff". So I think the more important questions than "what are neat things you've seen?" are WHERE does your Tiki bar take place? WHEN does your Tiki bar take place? And WHAT HAPPENED at your Tiki bar? Basically, think about it like a story. What is your Tiki bar's setting? Is it pre-colonial, British colonial, French colonial, American colonial, pre-war, or post-war? Is it Easter Island or New Zealand or Hawaii? East side of the Big Island or West side of the Big Island? Active volcano or lonely atoll? Is it real or is it fantasy? Authentic Tiki replicas or Atlantean ruins? Did anyone get shipwrecked there? Who? Pirates? A Swiss family? Is there a giant monkey on your island, or a mad scientist with a Victorian submarine? I could keep going... Point is, if you think about those questions, that can give your grotto a focus, help you to formulate a plan going ahead, and even help you come up with fresh ideas (because nothing hurts creativity as much as absolute freedom... Sometimes rules and limitations help). I love that bridge going over a moat in one of the previous photos. But now, the question stands, if I wanted to include that in my own bar, why? Does it fit in the story? What is on the other side of that moat? Is it a bridge to an island? Is it keeping dinosaurs out? All that said, this is just one way of thinking about it. Clearly I'm picking this idea up from Disney, and model railroading, and other avenues where themed design is thought about. Some people, yourself included, might not like it because it can come off as fake. There is also something to be said for a Tiki bar that is your own collection of stuff and grows organically from your own life and experience (like having photos of yourself and your family in it). You're not answerable to anyone but yourself. I just thought I might throw this perspective out there though, if it might help you at all. This online magazine on model railroading has a good article on thinking in terms of story and theme: http://mrhpub.com/2015-05-may/port/. The article is titled "Imagineering: Modeling a Themed Environment". |
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rumackay
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Mon, Jun 20, 2016 10:32 PM
More of a design thing than a decoration thing...but when I think of an outdoor bar a MUST HAVE for me would be SHELTER. You need to have protection form the elements, to be able to keep drinking without getting wet if it rains, if it's susceptible to high winds some cover from that too, and of course some shade at the bar to keep cool. I've seen more than a few that don't tick those boxes and I always think "what a shame". Otherwise, as far as decorations go, it's open slather for mine :) |
Pages: 1 12 replies