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Tiki torch lamp construction with Tikiskip!

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Want to detail the construction of our latest lamp -- a dual tiki torch floor lamp.

It's our latest but in a sense it's also one of our earliest, because we've had the idea and the materials sitting around for a long time. The genesis of the idea came from these two vintage torch pots, which could be used as table torches or mounted to a post for outdoor use:

torches

We found these years and years ago, at some estate sale certainly, and loved them for many reasons -- most especially because the pine green and cream stripes perfectly matched the tile flooring in the dance floor area of the Treasure Island Room, which is where we intended to use them.

We thought they would make a very nice floor lamp for the room, with a few pipes jutting out from a base at a diagonal angle. The idea came from the signage outside of Sarasota's Bahi Hut:

bahihut

So the idea would be to make a finished product something like this:

idea

But it was one of those things that just sat on a workshop shelf for years and years. We acquired some good black metal poles that would serve as the stakes, just never got around to it. Finally last week we took a journey to the land of the great Moai of the Kahiki, torch pots and stakes in tow, to see if lampmaster Tikiskip could help us get it together.

First thing he did was take a dremel to the pipe to get them the right heights, about five and six feet respectively:

dremel

On the base of the pots, there's a cylinder for mounting to a post that fit our pipes snugly:

base

We had to drill a hole there so we could get wiring through, and Tikiskip took out the old wicks from the pots and then fed lamp wire through the whole thing:

wiringup

If you've ever seen a Tikiskip lamp up close, you know he's got very special bulb bases. These were no exception:

bulbbase

Then Tikiskip put some candelabra flicker bulbs in the top. They're all wired up and ready for the base:

posts

At the base the two sets of wires were soldered together. We needed a base, and Tikiskip had a simple 1 gallon planter, the black plastic kinds you get at the nursery when you buy a plant ... we just made a few slits on one of the bottom holes to get the plug through:

planter

Then back at home we mixed up some Quickcrete concrete patch. Marie held the posts in the planter while I slapped in the concrete ... filling the pot but leaving about an inch from the top for other decor.

The concrete actually dried pretty quickly. We could let go after five minutes ... we had a stepladder to lean the pipes against, and just to be safe let it sit there overnight. Then we went to the workshop and got out a handy dandy coffee can labeled "shells from Treasure Island" and put some on the top. The dried concrete actually looked like beach sand anyway, but the shells were an extra fun touch:

shellbase

Then all we had to do was get it into place and plug it in ... and it really had that exciting backyard tiki torch glow:

warmglow

finished

flicker

[ Edited by mike and marie on 2022-09-06 18:10:59 ]

[ Edited by mike and marie on 2022-09-06 18:12:09 ]

[ Edited by mike and marie on 2022-09-06 18:13:30 ]

[ Edited by mike and marie on 2022-09-06 18:15:04 ]

T

They look great in your bar!

Also you did a great job on that thread how to, much more detail than I have been doing these days but then you are more of a writer than I.

But Mike you are going to need to study your tools more as that is an Angle Grinder I used to cut the poles, but you could use a Dremel tool as well, it would just be slower.

Damn I look like a fat old lady in those shots, that's what you get for wearing pink I guess.

Wish we had more time, I do want to see that float tied one day.

[ Edited by tikiskip on 2022-09-07 19:24:14 ]

But Mike you are going to need to study your tools more as that is an Angle Grinder I used to cut the poles, but you could use a Dremel tool as well, it would just be slower.

Ahahaha yes an angle grinder ... I need one of those ... I have a great bench grinder but I can see how these can also be useful. I'm self-taught tool wise so it's funny to me that I went all these years without a Dremel. But it's the tool of choice for so many things ...

H
Hamo posted on Thu, Sep 8, 2022 6:47 PM

Looks great. Thanks for sharing. Love the animated Skip gif, too.

T

"and it really had that exciting backyard tiki torch glow:"

Ha! you can tell Mikes a writer.

Sounds like a Ronco product, or something Ron Popeil would be selling on the shopping network.

Ron Popeils Torch-o-Matic.

Yes, we can build these for you -- bring the tiki glow INSIDE all year round and without any hassle of matches or smelly oils! Only several small payments of $19.95!*

  • In 42 down payments recurring over the next 28 months on your credit card which shall appear as RONCOTIKI and is a non-revokable non-refundable fee. Tax, shipping and handling, service charges, extra handling, box fee, stipend, gratuity, sin tax, ohana tithe, gambling kitty, slush fund, and other fees and numbers we decide to run up are extra and not included (but will be charged)

Order now and we'll DOUBLE our offer for free! Just pay separate shipping, processing and all those other fees.

Seriously, the lights look great!

Great job!

Pages: 1 7 replies