|
Bali Hai, San Diego, CA (Restaurant) |
bigtikidude Tiki Socialite
Joined: Aug 10, 2004 Posts: 8255 From: Anaheim,Ca.
| Posted: 2012-11-21 5:16 pm  Permalink
3.50, such a deal,
what is thanksgiving out now,
like 30 to 40 bucks and up.
Jeff(btd)
 
 
|
Dustycajun Tiki Socialite
Joined: Nov 16, 2007 Posts: 3923 From: Santa Barbara, CA
| Posted: 2013-01-14 5:25 pm  Permalink
Quote:
|
On 2012-11-21 16:43, Luckydesigns wrote:
Found this in a San Diego Union newspaper from 1963.
It was just laying around my office!
|
|
I love the old Thanksgiving Day ads from Tiki restaurants, nice find.
Here is another ad for the sunset viewing of the lights turning on across the bay.
And a few more old photos found on-line.
This is a cool one of Dad checking out the Tiki with his little daughter.
DC
 
 
|
arriano Tiki Socialite
Joined: Jun 13, 2006 Posts: 1123 From: Birdland - San Diego
| Posted: 2013-01-16 08:42 am  Permalink
Here's a new article about the owners of Bali Hai:
http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2013/jan/14/tp-all-in-the-restaurant-family/
_________________ "I am Lono!" -- Hale Ka'a Tiki Lounge
 
 
|
Dustycajun Tiki Socialite
Joined: Nov 16, 2007 Posts: 3923 From: Santa Barbara, CA
| Posted: 2013-03-24 11:11 am  Permalink
I had a conversation with Bigbro a while back (over rum drinks) about the lack of menu imagery from the Bali Hai. For being one of the oldest long-running Tiki meccas, they had a paucity of interesting menu art. They used, and continue to use, two basic styles:
The Fisherman God
And the exterior rendering
And there was also Bigbro's menu that started from "The Hut" that transitioned to the Bali Hai.
So it was great interest when I saw this menu on ebay, pretty cool, a different style from the Bali Hai.
DC
 
 
|
bigbrotiki Tiki Socialite
Joined: Mar 25, 2002 Posts: 10561 From: Tiki Island, above the Silverlake
| Posted: 2013-03-24 3:21 pm  Permalink
Indeed. Compared to the artistic level of some of the other great Tiki Mecca menu covers, both the Fisherman's god and the restaurant-with-sailboat renderings are kind of crude and loveless - the Fisherman being just a copy of popular souvenir statue, and both renderings being printed in this dark, monochrome brown. They just don't reflect the intricate concepts used at the place - its architecture, its Tiki statue map, and the humor of the head hunter entrance statue and logo mug among them.
I mean: BALIIII HAIIII !!? That should inspire some evocative romantic imagery!
And sorry, that last one is completely off in my view:
The patterns have nothing to do with Oceanic art, and rather remind me of some Bavarian farm furniture folk art.
I really would like to know what happened to the original Christian's Hut proprietors, and why the place failed for them. Did THEY come up with the map display case concept, and the entrance head hunter design? Its cartoony-ness is certainly in keeping with the Goof logo of the Christian's Huts.
And WHO was it that designed those?
 
 
|
|