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

Tiki Central / Collecting Tiki

Tiki Finds

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 11,539 replies

Paipo...don't know if you will be able to read from the pictures. Here is the story...

"The Story of Ikky Woo Woo

Ikky Woo Woo was a Jivaro Indian who lost his head.

The Jivaro (pronounced hi varo) live deep in the steaming jungles of Ecuador and Peru, along the course of the mighty, treacherous Amazon River.
These-the largest and most powerful South American Indians-strike terror into the hearts of other tribes, because of their ability to shrink heads to 1/5th of their natural size.

Jivaros are not cannibals, and do not kill wantonly, but as a part of their religion. A head hunting expedition is often caused by the death of the oldest male in the family. This must be avenged by the stamping out of evil spirits causing the death...and these spirits reside in someone's head. the bruja (medicine man) and sons of the departed drink natema, a brew of bitter roots. This strong narcotic produces visions, which tell them where the evil spirits are. The braves paint their bodies in grotesque patterns, braid feathers into their long hair, and set forth.

While a head can be preserved and shrunken in one week, the ritual lasts up to a year. An Indian working on the tsantsa (head) is painted red, lives on a special diet, eats no flesh, and shuns women. He dances the hanlsamata (Spirit Killing Dance), so the tsantsa will not cause death or accident to him or his clan.

At year's end, the entire tribe has a victory celebration. The Indian beeseches the spirits of his ancestors to transmigrate the dead soul into an animal, a plant, a stone or another human body, and so give it a home where it will not be free to plague him. The tsantsa, itself, has no further value, and is tossed aside.

Ikky Woo Woo, one of the most perfect Tsantsas ever to be brought out of the jungle, was one of two authentic shrunken heads in the Robert Ripley Collection exhibited at the 1932 Chicago World's Fair. Ikky is insured for $5,000.00.

Make a wish-put a coin in Ikky's box. The box is opened regularly and the contents distributed to local charities. Help someone in need and make your own wish come true".


PTD

[ Edited by: Psycho Tiki D 2008-10-14 17:26 ]

great 1970's shirt i found at the goodwill today.
sometimes you get lucky!!


Wow... That shirt is awesome!! It would look great in my closet!!
Nice Find!

It's been a slow autumn for me, especially with Tikiville zealously snapping up everything in sight :wink:
I did make a couple of good finds:

Orchids R-13A coconut mug, Tiki Farm Squll mug from an unexpected place, and an unmarked skull mug, probably designed as Halloween merchandise rather than anything Tiki-related.

A set of four Beauce Pottery moai mugs, classic green glaze. Here's a close up of the bottom (same on all four):

Can anyone give me an estimate on the actual age of these? Is 1952 a production year, copyright year, model number...? There's not a lot of info on the web on this company - at least, not in English.

looks like you got nuthin to cry about ! that is an awsome lot of stuff to find....that only means I'm not trying hard enough lol
congrats to you !
REALLY people you may think Edmonton is a hotbed of HAWAII but it's that we are obsessed!

Some stuff from the past few weeks...

Westwood $3; Orchids of Hawaii R-73A $1.


3 LPs: Al Harrington "I Love This Land", Martin Denny "Theme from Hawaii", Arthur Lyman "Aloha Amigo". All LPs $1 each


Tiki brand "Royal Hawaiian Party Lights" never used $2

T

i bought this bar afew weeks ago from a friend she to;d me that it had been purchases for her father in the 60's. it is old u can tell that how i can not any stamp or markings saying who what or where. can any one help me ID THIS BAR AND STOOLS PLEASE THE BAR I BELIEVE IS MADE OF A SOLID WOOD I THINK IT IS PINE.

On 2008-10-15 14:45, tywoody wrote:
i bought this bar afew weeks ago from a friend she to;d me that it had been purchases for her father in the 60's. it is old u can tell that how i can not any stamp or markings saying who what or where. can any one help me ID THIS BAR AND STOOLS PLEASE THE BAR I BELIEVE IS MADE OF A SOLID WOOD I THINK IT IS PINE.

Check out the Witco thread...that might give you an idea...nice find!

PTD

On 2008-10-15 10:44, TIKIVILLE wrote:
looks like you got nuthin to cry about ! that is an awsome lot of stuff to find....that only means I'm not trying hard enough lol
congrats to you !
REALLY people you may think Edmonton is a hotbed of HAWAII but it's that we are obsessed!

It helps that there's only, like, 3 of us scouring the city's thrift stores and antique malls for this stuff. I'm amazed by some of the items that pop up here! And you've made some good finds yourself lately, Tikiville - I was just giving you a hard time since you're the slightly newer newbie on TC :wink:

yes of coarse lol ... .
to confirm I did find another TIKI yesterday ...( about 10" kinda small I know ) 2 tone wood carving looks great in the pile ! lol
I'll post a photo tomorrow...

Today's find has eluded me for some time and I never thought I would find one in the wild.

Stopped by a store I hadn't been for awhile and found this...


Marked "Exclusively for Skipper Kent's San Francisco CA-Kona Hawaii".

There wasn't a price on it, but luckily, the lady who owned the mug was in the store.

Not a bad find for $6.00.

Gotta love it!

PTD

[ Edited by: Psycho Tiki D 2008-10-16 16:26 ]

On 2008-10-15 08:37, Brandomoai wrote:

A set of four Beauce Pottery moai mugs, classic green glaze. Here's a close up of the bottom (same on all four):

Can anyone give me an estimate on the actual age of these? Is 1952 a production year, copyright year, model number...? There's not a lot of info on the web on this company - at least, not in English.

What I've been able to find out is that the "cb" trademark (for "Ceramique Beauce" - below the word "Beauce") was introduced in 1965. 1952 is likely a product number.

DOES ,anyone know how many versions of the MAI KAI rum barrel there have been?

here's this weeks stuff!....so far moew ha ha ha ha

"To expedite crying, poke a hole up through the eyes."

Works good on people too.

On 2008-10-17 14:38, Sweet Daddy Tiki wrote:
"To expedite crying, poke a hole up through the eyes."

Works good on people too.

so what are ya sayin ? ....lol

A few things today...


Another "Leilani" mug, but my first marked "Hawaiian Inn" Orchids of Hawaii, Japan.



I am guessing these are mugs? Shipwrecked boat on an island with another island with coconut trees and another island in the distance. Quite possibly the ugliest mugs I have ever seen. From the Hyatt Regency in Kauai. Made by "Porcelain by Design" New Orleans LA.


Coco Joes King Kamehameha I.


Coco Joes Tiki lighter.




I found my third Aloha Airlines travel brochure. This one is going to Mr. and Mrs. alohacurrent.


Posted in the velvet thread as well is the very nice, but very dusty velvet nude painted by an artist called Penlo.

Later!

PTD

T

Love that velvet

Still even more Harvey' mugs today...


Oh yeah, and another small Coco Joes jeweled tiki. I must have about at least 50 of the bucket and 30 of the hula girl mugs now! Still, I will buy them when they are in the $1.00-$2.00 range!


Two green bucket mugs from The Mandarin, Ghirardell Square, San Fransico and a Daga coconut mug from Fat City Bar and Cafe, Old Sacramento and San Diego. Didn't know they had mugs. They are now called "Fats Asian Bistro".



Hawaiian tourist souvenior of a model "Hawaiian Outrigger Canoe". Label reads: "Carved out of Koa Wood, the same wood that the King's warriors used when they went into the forest to cut down the large Koa trees, and by burning and scraping shaped their canoes into this same design".
I like the design on the box.

Later,

PTD

T

Been a little slow in posting my finds here's like the last 3 weeks worth.

Postcards & more postcards

Me & Mini Me

Mugs, mugs & a Reyn Spooner tie, carving, cookbook, weird tea light Moai & swizzles



An Army of Mai Kai mugs... Got nine, anyone need one?

Aloha Tiki Lau & New Tiki, some swag from the last day sale

Favorite finds, the lava's a Frank Schirman anyone have any info on it?

Tikisgrl

K

Tikigrl - you found an OMC tiki bowl volcano insert - that's the pick of the litter. Congratulations.

Beth,

Wow what great scores! What is the story on the turquoise Moai?

PTD

T

On 2008-10-19 16:46, Psycho Tiki D wrote:
Beth,

Wow what great scores! What is the story on the turquoise Moai?

PTD

It's a mass produced tea light holder, looks pretty cool though?

Beth

Too cool. From the picture it almost looked like some kind of wall hanging.

Thanks,

D

Found a few things at garage sales on Saturday:


The Harvey's bucket mug and mint copy of Martin Denny's "Exotica" are pretty self-explanatory.


:up: But I haven't seen this Bali Hai brandy or cordial glass before


This vintage children's encyclopedia has some nice illustrations


I really like this artist.

LT

The Bali Hai glass and the children's encyclopedia are great!

This week's stuff:
A smaller frosted tiki face mug from Disneyworld

A Daga Kon Tiki Sheraton Waikiki mug

A plaster Tahitian dancer plaque. It's about 7" x 16"

made in Tahiti

Marked Mino or Nino 1975

Four small plastic Heitiki pendants from NZ:

Souvineer wood carving from New Zealand

Some mounted canvas prints of Hawaii in the Good Old days:
This was the largest at about 20x30"

Little smaller version framed

The rest measure about 16x20"

Two more mounted but not framed

One more

Buzzy Out!

LT

A different sort of find...

My dad discovered this in a box while cleaning out his garage. He didn't know where it came from so he sent me these photos. When I was in elementary school I went on a class field-trip to "Marine World, Africa USA" up in Central California. I purchased this as a souvenir at one of the shops; it's my very first tiki mug, it cost $1.39.

Some stuff I found this weekend...

A Coco Joe's piece; I'm not sure if it's an ashtry or some sort of serving dish.

.

Not particularly Tiki, a Benihana Chef Mug.

.

An interesting piece of barware, the "Bar Aid". Find the drink you wish to mix among those listed (80 in all) on the front panel, note the number on the left - say Planter's Punch, #63 - turn the thumb wheel until "63" appears in the small window on the left and the instructions for mixing your drink appear in the larger window on the right. It's metal with a baked enamel finish. I'm guessing it's from the '50s or '60s.

I also found a 3 record album of Disney's Fantasia soundtrack from 1957, distributed by Vista records. Incorporated into the album is a 24 page "Program" from the film with lots of very nice illustrations.

T

Found these on Saturday, :D :D can't wait to put them in those new Monkeyman frames I purchased finally..

Today's finds!

tiki napkin/letter holder, table lighter minus the lighter


two Martin Denny LP's..."The Best Of" and "Golden Greats"

Everything was .99 each!!! So gratifying...

T

On 2008-10-19 22:01, Bay Park Buzzy wrote:
This week's stuff:
A smaller frosted tiki face mug from Disneyworld

YO Buzzy, I just got mine in the mail today from an ebay purchase...exact same one !
yes, I will be fixing a Leilani Volcano and drinking it out of this tonight.

T

One more find...

Tikisgrl

More paper finds..

i traded some of my Bellevue TV barware for a dozen plates!

A set of Primo glasses with tiki graphics, first tiki find I've got out of Goodwill in months.

.

An interesting piece of barware, the "Bar Aid". Find the drink you wish to mix among those listed (80 in all) on the front panel, note the number on the left - say Planter's Punch, #63 - turn the thumb wheel until "63" appears in the small window on the left and the instructions for mixing your drink appear in the larger window on the right. It's metal with a baked enamel finish. I'm guessing it's from the '50s or '60s.

They even have a pocket sized high tech version of this with a hideous mai tai recipe with lots of grenadine

LT

On 2008-10-24 07:05, naugatiki wrote:

They even have a pocket sized high tech version of this with a hideous mai tai recipe with lots of grenadine

That's a great idea for a smart-phone/blackberry/pocket-pc application; a portable Grog Log/Intoxica.

CJ

I scored a few things this early morn and also wanted to share a signed record I found a couple weeks ago:






Hi

I'm new to Tiki, so please forgive any dumb remarks.

Found these two pieces in Switzerland (mugs, vases...?). They're 7 1/4 and 6 3/4 inches tall. Noone round here recognises them as European.

Can anyone tell me where they came from or who made them?


Thanks

LT

Those mugs most likely came from the Mövenpick restaurant chain in Switzerland.

T

Here are a few of today's finds.

It's actually a nice light blue, not marked on it any where but it holds a whopping 32 oz. Just put in up on OM..


And this nice OMC with it's label still on the bottom. It actually looked like some one had a drink in it and never cleaned in out. It has some pinkish gunk in the bottom. :lol:
It also has some really nice hand painting touches over the other colors on top of the glaze.

Well the Gods have been good to me the last couple of weeks. Here's what I have found in the wilds of Michigan. First up a "Green girl" print in great shape.

Coco Joe petroglyph ashtray and lighter set.

A souvenir ashtray and lighter set.

Some resin goodies.

OMC unmarked moai mug. Aku Aku Vegas Ku mug. Luau Hut mug.

Aku Aku Cadilac Michigan menu and postcards


Trader Vic's Palmer House menu 1964.

And a huge Witco cat fireplace tool holder with tools and I don't even have a fireplace.

Busy entertaining this weekend, but not too busy to find a couple of items...


Bali Hai Shelter Island Point Loma San Diego CA ashtray.


Slightly different than the one I alreaday had on the right.



Islander Stockton Palm Tree Hula Girl mug. Someone had painted over the Islander logo, not sure why??




Earlier OMC Ku styled mugs.

Later and great finds by everyone lately! Thanks for posting them.

PTD

[ Edited by: Psycho Tiki D 2008-10-26 16:54 ]

On 2008-10-26 16:52, Psycho Tiki D wrote:

Islander Stockton Palm Tree Hula Girl mug. Someone had painted over the Islander logo, not sure why??

PTD, is there a chance for restoration? Are you going to remove the paint or keep as is?

Weekend rummage finds:

Coco Joe 75¢, large Maori Tiki candle $2.00

that's all.

On 2008-10-26 19:00, tikipedia wrote:

On 2008-10-26 16:52, Psycho Tiki D wrote:

Islander Stockton Palm Tree Hula Girl mug. Someone had painted over the Islander logo, not sure why??

PTD, is there a chance for restoration? Are you going to remove the paint or keep as is?

tikipedia,

The logo was entirely covered with paint. It can be removed, but I will probably just leave it the way I found it. I have a few more of the same mug, so it is fine the way I found it. Just can't figure out why someone would go to the trouble of painting over a logo? Was it used by another restuarant and disguised or did the person that originally owned it not want any of their friends or family to know where it came from?

PTD

[ Edited by: Psycho Tiki D 2008-10-27 05:36 ]

Scored on some free tikis today I was staging a house in South Seattle and these were left in the garden . I informed the real estate agent that it was my duty to rescue them before they rotted.
three Witco tikis from Lelani Lanes. unfortunately painted and made into bowling trophies in the late 80's. They have been sitting in the wet dirt for a while cause the bottoms are all ready mushy. I also got an Easter Island kava kava carving. YEA I love the free score!!!



https://tikicentral.com/uploads/3734/44e0b79e.jpg

[ Edited by: Sophista-tiki 2008-10-28 07:49 ]

My old neighbor used to work for the wholesaler for Witco out of Los Angeles. He said the he would carry a blow-torch and rags with him when he went on the road with his sales samples. If any of the pieces split (frequent occurance) or were chipped or scratched he would just hit the surface with the torch and char the freshly exposed wood and then burnish it with a rag, and hit that with wax afterward. you might be able to take care of the paint AND weathering all at once. But please do this (or don't) at your own risk.

Best
Mark

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 11539 replies