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The Tapa Outrigger Lamp is hung and back in action!!!! |
Aloha John Grand Member (4 years)
Joined: Oct 25, 2005 Posts: 138 From: San Bernardino, CA
| Posted: 2007-12-30 10:06 pm  
OK quick background- Polynesian themed restaurant in San Bernardino- according to Critiki - "Trader Island was likely operating in the '60s, possibly the '50s. By 1970, the site had become Edwin Tan's Chinese Gardens. The location is now Mandarin Garden. "
Well during the final days of Mandarin Garden this last June, the owner, knowing my love for tiki sold me the one Moai volcano bowl they had, and several ceramic clam shell bowls they serve scorpions in.
http://www.tikiroom.com/tikicentral/bb/viewtopic.php?topic=24686&forum=5
There was a tapa outrigger canoe lamp hanging in the bar area. I asked MG owner if I could buy it. He said the new guy (Toro Bravo) had already taken inventory and he couldn't sell it.
So Toro Bravo opens, 2 buildings away from the most well established Mexican restaurant in Berdoo - The Mexico Cafe. We go in, food and service were horrible, but the lamp was still hanging in the bar. I asked the new guy about the lamp and he agreed to my offer but said I'd need to come back after something lease related was finalized in a week or so...well Toro Bravos doors weren't open for very long and I wasn't ever able to get in touch with the guy again.
At least once a week, for the past 5 months we'd drive by it on the way to dinner and waited for some sign of activity. Then last week there was activity, a new sign goes up, Scorpions Sport Bar. Well OK I am not much for sports bars, but hey it's got a scorpion for the logo, and the doors will be unlocked, and anything is better than the building getting demo'd. So it opened on Thursday, and tonight we finally had a chance to go in. Only a few people were there but they were welcoming. As we walked over to the bar, *gasp* the lamp is not hanging there anymore! I had said we wanted to see what was happening to the place. New guy says - Oh did you guys come when it was Mandarin Garden? I said yes, and then popped the question - Do you know what happened to the old lamp that was hanging right there? He said - get this - oh are you the guy that wanted to buy it? Jason (MG owner) told me not to throw it away and that he knew you'd be back for it. It's in the back if you want it. I couldn't believe it! After all these months I had come to grips with the fact that it may be in the county landfill by now...but no it is mine!! So I went home and got my truck and swung by the atm and brought it home!
There are a couple more souvenirs he is saving for me to pick up next weekend, not as exciting as the bowl or the lamp, but items that are important to me, and important to the history of the building.
So enough blabbing - onto the lamp. It is 6'7" long and 33" wide. I thought it may be from OA but it looks different from the picture of their outrigger tapa lamp in the catalog I saw on TC. I may take it down there on my next trip and ask them if they made it.
Anybody got any advice on repairing those tears? For the most part the tears are just tears, the flaps just need to be closed up. Can I Mod Podge something onto the inside as a patch, that will still let light though?
Pretty cool late Xmas gift eh? I know another local restaurant that MG owner still owns, I will be going by there soon to personally thank him for telling the new guy not to throw it away...
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[ This Message was edited by: Aloha John 2008-01-01 21:47 ]
 
 
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JenTiki Grand Member (4 years)
Joined: Jun 16, 2006 Posts: 1695 From: An island in the bay
| Posted: 2007-12-30 10:43 pm  
Wow! That's really sweet! I expect that Monkeyman or Kahaka could help you out with info on how to mend the tapa since they work with the stuff all the time for lamps. But personally, I would head over to OA, get some new tapa and recover the whole thing.
Great score, John! Happy New Year to you!
 
 
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Aloha John Grand Member (4 years)
Joined: Oct 25, 2005 Posts: 138 From: San Bernardino, CA
| Posted: 2007-12-30 11:22 pm  
Thanks Jentiki, Happy New Year to you too. I'd like to make an attempt to patch it first, I really like the tapa design, and I dig the "patina" look too.
A little more about the building itself- this tiki is in the middle of the dining room. It is on a metal stand that may be about 2 feet tall. The guy who own the building apparently has turned down $2K for the tiki.
This is another pic I took in the dining room showing the faux rock planter around the room.
I actually don't have any good ones of the building from the outside, yet. It is a quite amazing A-frame. This is all I have, matching shirt was a coincidence.
You can get a better look at the outside from this matchbook in Ookoo Lady's collection.
The new guy tonight told me there are supposed to be some old pictures around somewhere upstairs that supposedly show Marilyn Monroe, among others, there.
I'll keep digging...
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Mai Tai Tiki Socialite
Joined: Mar 21, 2004 Posts: 1189 From: Isle of Alameda
| Posted: 2007-12-31 02:29 am  
Hey, that is great score John! I agree on not replacing the old tapa, it's way cool with the old stuff colored from years of age and smoke. Plus I really like that pattern that's already on it.
Yeah, between Monkeyman, Kahaka, Tikiskip, and maybe a few others like Bamboo Ben and Basement Kahuna, and Bob and Leroy over at OA, you can probably figure out the correct way to patch it. Maybe a blank piece of tapa modge podge'd on the inside would work - maybe they know some other fabric substitute to use instead of blank tapa. I don't know if it would be better to use a skinny piece to just patch each tear, or put a large piece the size of the whole section with the tear. Either way, the thickness of the patching is going to show through in some way when the light from the bulbs inside shines through. Maybe you can modge podge a whole new layer inside of the entire lamp, for consistency.
I'll tell you something, that outrigger lamp has inspired me, and I am going to try to make one myself very soon!
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"It's Mai Tai. It's out of this world." - Victor Jules Bergeron Jr.
 
 
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Bora Boris Grand Member (first year)
Joined: Mar 25, 2005 Posts: 1356 From: Boogie Wonderland
| Posted: 2007-12-31 05:08 am  
Very Cool Aloha John,
Congratulations!
What a great way to start the New Year.
 
 
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bigbrotiki Tiki Socialite
Joined: Mar 25, 2002 Posts: 7055 From: Tiki Island, above the Silverlake
| Posted: 2007-12-31 08:05 am  
Great! That building was always one of my favorite A-frames, glad it is still standing! But why do Mexicans have to paint A-frames pink !? (see Tahitian Village, Tiki Modern page 270). Never mind the Tiki pole! Last time I saw the place was when I drove back from the closing day of Santa's Village.
They used to have a Leilani Rum Vacuform Tiki there that I coveted, wonder who got him. That Outrigger lamp was probably made by Oceanic Arts, they should have ideas how to fix the Tapa, I would leave it, too.
 
 
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Swanky Tiki Socialite
Joined: Apr 03, 2002 Posts: 3991 From: Hapa Haole Hideaway, TN
| Posted: 2007-12-31 08:54 am  
First I would take a vacuum cleaner with the brush attachment and gently brush away any dust you can. This is a great way to clean old lamps safely. You can probably do the repair with bonding web from the fabric store. Cut it to fit and iron it on and its done. It's white and would likely be un-noticable and would seal it right up.
Keep it original!
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tikiskip Grand Member (3 years)
Joined: Nov 26, 2005 Posts: 1159 | Posted: 2007-12-31 10:02 am  
Cool story!
Your story is a lot like it was to get the Kahiki stuff I have.
It just does not fall in your lap.
Try to find a translucent paper maybe that stuff we used to make
model air planes with.
Test it first. Just lay paper inside and light it.
If you get the right glow. Use it.
Swankys right clean the lamp before you start.
First lay paper inside trace size to fit 1.5 inches larger than true fit.
Also get a low tack spray adhesive spray the paper you use and the
lamp paper inside.
Now lay paper inside. Trim to size.
You can glue around the edges of new paper to make a secure fit.
This method should not harm old tapa.
I would also keep the old tapa.
Cool lamp!!!
 
 
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Aloha John Grand Member (4 years)
Joined: Oct 25, 2005 Posts: 138 From: San Bernardino, CA
| Posted: 2007-12-31 10:07 am  
Thanks for all the advice fellas. For now I am just going to dust off the outside, replace the fixtures, and hang it in the tiki lounge and admire it! I'll get to the repair later in Jan.
I'll try to take it to OA next Saturday. If they did make I bet they'll get a kick out of seeing it has survived!
Whoever did make it cared about the aesthetics for sure. I notice all the bamboo trim is drilled and tied on with what looks like fishing line. And the pieces were cut so that the node spacing is consistent too. Also notice all the relief cuts in the curved bamboo piece on the keel(?).
Mai Tai- the framework itself looks pretty simply to make. If you need any other reference pics when you make one let me know. I may even make one too, now that I see how simple it is. The tapa would be the biggest expense, and I would think the most challenging part of the build.
Sven - the building has been that color for quite a while so I don't know that it was a Mexican that painted it that way. I do know the guy that owns the building is Asian, and he owned it during the Mandarin Garden days too. I think I was told he'd sell if for 2 million. That tiki pole is pretty funky, do you know anything about it? The Leilani Rum Vacuform Tiki you mentioned seeing there...is it what you are describing here:
"This is exactly the bottle I have been looking for for my Leilani Rum Vacuform display Tiki. This Tiki was an age old obsession of mine until I found one in Waikiki in '99. For those of you who know the Vacuform wall-Tikis at the Tiki Ti that have the drink menu scratched into them, THEY are those. They used to have big feet that the Leilani Rum bottle stood on, backlit by a bulb behind the bottle, and by bulbs in the Tiki. A nice item."
I'll keep my eyes peeled over there...how tall are they, I don't recall seeing it at the Tiki Ti. I'll get some shots of the building later today, it's only 2 miles from my house.
Swanky- taking an iron to it sounds kinda scary, and I don't think I could get the iron in all the spots I'd need to. Does that stuff only need a little heat to set? I'd need to hold the torn flaps against the bonding web from the outside too.
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tikiskip Grand Member (3 years)
Joined: Nov 26, 2005 Posts: 1159 | Posted: 2007-12-31 10:07 am  
One more thing you may have tapa missing in spots.
Use a magic marker to color in those spots.
I would also do the whole lamp.
Reinforce with paper that is.
 
 
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Aloha John Grand Member (4 years)
Joined: Oct 25, 2005 Posts: 138 From: San Bernardino, CA
| Posted: 2007-12-31 10:23 am  
Thanks tikiskip! You posts came in while I was typing. I like your idea. Is that also the kind of paper commonly seen on lamps like this sconce at OA?
And perhaps the middle one here too (also at OA)
I've got plans to make some lamps and needed to get some of that anyway. I will need to make some relief cuts in the paper to get it to follow the curves of the hull right? Does that type of paper have a name?
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tikiskip Grand Member (3 years)
Joined: Nov 26, 2005 Posts: 1159 | Posted: 2007-12-31 10:36 am  
I'm not sure about the first lamp.
That is probably a fiberglass type paper.
The second lamp is a fiberglass tube.
I can't find those anywhere. The tube that is.
Don't know about any relief cuts.
Looks like you will have about 15 oblong squares,
glued in each panel.
Don't know the name of that paper. Hobby store will.
Plus Dick Blick has all kind of paper.
OA will know better that I how to fix your lamp.
Good Luck!!
 
 
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tikiskip Grand Member (3 years)
Joined: Nov 26, 2005 Posts: 1159 | Posted: 2007-12-31 10:50 am  
Read this.
http://www.freedomflightmodels.com/modeltips.htm
 
 
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tikiskip Grand Member (3 years)
Joined: Nov 26, 2005 Posts: 1159 | Posted: 2007-12-31 11:16 am  
Here is a lamp fix I did on a Kahiki lamp.
Not a great match on the paper.
But I had to do this patch on the outside.
Small tube.
But when it's haging high you can't tell.
This will give you an idea.
 
 
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Swanky Tiki Socialite
Joined: Apr 03, 2002 Posts: 3991 From: Hapa Haole Hideaway, TN
| Posted: 2007-12-31 11:18 am  
The bonding web is used through other materials when you iron. Go to the fabric store and look at the various types of this stuff. A quick hot iron on it and you are set for life. Probably you can take a towel and hold it on the outside as you iron on th einside and get it fixed.
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