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Art & Inspiration Mid-Century Christmas

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by Royalshifter, Dec 18, 2010.

  1. hotrodladycrusr
    Joined: Sep 20, 2002
    Posts: 20,765

    hotrodladycrusr
    Member

    Fixed it for ya :D
     
  2. Royalshifter
    Joined: May 29, 2005
    Posts: 15,583

    Royalshifter
    Moderator
    from California

    Ha ha awesome photos.
     
  3. desertdroog
    Joined: Nov 16, 2001
    Posts: 1,020

    desertdroog
    Member

    Heh! I blame it on the Fez. I mean, who doesn't get randy when wearing one?
     
  4. flatoutflyin
    Joined: Jun 16, 2010
    Posts: 385

    flatoutflyin
    Member

    Fantastic thread. Merry Christmas to all. A few mid-century images from my mom's 1949, 1951, and 1955 Christmas photos.
     

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  5. Hey 65Riviera,

    A menorah AND a Christmas tree? You're not taking any chances on missing out on presents. I gotta respect that!
     
  6. HealeyRick
    Joined: May 5, 2009
    Posts: 573

    HealeyRick
    Member
    from Mass.

    Holy crap, we had that same egg nog set when I was a kid in the '50s!

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]
     
  7. hotrodladycrusr
    Joined: Sep 20, 2002
    Posts: 20,765

    hotrodladycrusr
    Member

    BINGO! Now I know what to get my boyfriend for Christmas! Thanks bud!:D
     
  8. Flashback58
    Joined: Jan 1, 2008
    Posts: 119

    Flashback58
    Member
    from Tucson Az.

    [​IMG]

    Merry Christmas from a cold snowy Calgary, Alberta, Canada, from my self and my Dad, electricalguy!

    Happy Holidays
     
  9. OLLIN
    Joined: Aug 25, 2006
    Posts: 3,147

    OLLIN
    Member

    Merry christmas everyone! I finally got around to setting up my tree...
     

    Attached Files:

  10. Royalshifter
    Joined: May 29, 2005
    Posts: 15,583

    Royalshifter
    Moderator
    from California

    Looks cozy OLLIN...Merry Christmas.
     
  11. Royalshifter
    Joined: May 29, 2005
    Posts: 15,583

    Royalshifter
    Moderator
    from California

  12. Royalshifter
    Joined: May 29, 2005
    Posts: 15,583

    Royalshifter
    Moderator
    from California

  13. pretty cool pictures.....
     
  14. RainierHooker
    Joined: Dec 20, 2011
    Posts: 2,031

    RainierHooker
    Member
    from Tacoma, WA

    'Tis the season. New (old) house, but the same christmas cheer...

    ImageUploadedByH.A.M.B.1387428793.409681.jpg

    ImageUploadedByH.A.M.B.1387428812.773888.jpg

    ImageUploadedByH.A.M.B.1387428828.766965.jpg

    ImageUploadedByH.A.M.B.1387428845.573743.jpg

    ImageUploadedByH.A.M.B.1387428869.600719.jpg

    Happy Holidays guys...


    Posted using my Lil' Orphan Annie Secret Society Decoder Pin
     
    Last edited: Dec 19, 2013
  15. I was hoping that someone would spike this thread back up top. One of my favorites.
     
  16. Heres our from the Smoky Mountians.We went to a tree farm and cut down a nice live tree.Boy it smells good!Bruce.
     

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  17. Squablow
    Joined: Apr 26, 2005
    Posts: 17,443

    Squablow
    Member

    Awesome pictures! Would love to see more.

    Kinda off-topic, but is there a HAMB-esque forum for old houses and such? If anyone could point me in that direction.
     
  18. fleetside66
    Joined: Nov 20, 2006
    Posts: 3,009

    fleetside66
    Member

    Snapped this one the other day of our new mid century place, with my '66 under the carport. Put an X-mas wreath up a couple hours later to make it official.

    [​IMG]
     
    zman likes this.
  19. Squablow
    Joined: Apr 26, 2005
    Posts: 17,443

    Squablow
    Member

  20. Tis the season, again! Merry Christmas to all.
     
  21. RainierHooker
    Joined: Dec 20, 2011
    Posts: 2,031

    RainierHooker
    Member
    from Tacoma, WA

    Christmas on our block...

    ImageUploadedByH.A.M.B.1387552571.023386.jpg


    Posted using my Lil' Orphan Annie Secret Society Decoder Pin
     
  22. I'm digging this post up from wayyy back.
    Yes it was a fun happy way of living. If only we didn't know now what we didn't know then.
    But that was part of it. We were kids, and it was all about Christmas!
    Graduated from H.S. in 66, and this way of life was to leave all too soon.
    I'm so proud of all you guys for recognizing that it really was a special time.
    Merry Christmas! Mike
     
  23. stingbean
    Joined: Dec 30, 2007
    Posts: 228

    stingbean
    Member

    There's a forum attached to this site:
    http://retrorenovation.com/
    I've never posted on the forum, but the main site has lots of good info on mid-century houses, décor, etc.
     
  24. Brandi
    Joined: Sep 1, 2007
    Posts: 1,041

    Brandi
    Member


    This is an amazing house!
     
  25. tjet
    Joined: Mar 16, 2009
    Posts: 1,335

    tjet
    Member
    1. Early Hemi Tech

    Cool thread

    Nice houses guys

    Merry xmas
     
  26. Spooky
    Joined: Mar 3, 2001
    Posts: 2,251

    Spooky
    Member

    Howza Bruthas and Sistas-

    I just got done writing this little gem and thought I would share it with everyone. Oh, have no worries, I will be posting my other story later this evening. As tradition would have it.

    So without further ado, I give you my latest.




    Candy Cane

    I paced at the end of our driveway and waited.
    The skies were threatening and the winds were increasing. I knew that a storm was coming and the temperature was dropping like a rock. Yet, Dad was not in site. It was December 20th 1959 and I had the feeling that my Dad was not going to make it home.
    Him and Candy Cane were lost.

    My Dad was a sales rep for a major paint company back when companies rewarded their salesman with good salaries and opportunities. My Dad had chosen the western seaboard from Seatle to San Diego. This meant he had many miles to travel and many people to meet. Dad was born in the hard winter of 1938. His father was a miller and his mom a seamstress. A single child and a gift to two parents who had lost three children to sickness and hard times. He grew to be gifted with an inviting smile and a sharp wit and likeable nature. Dad was tall and was an imposing sight, which was humourous because he had not a mean bone in his body. A gentle giant. Dad graduated from high school in 1956. He had the opportunity to advance his education, but a friend of his father's had a connection and Dad was brought into the fold as a trainee at a major automotive paint company. Dad was a quick study and his rise to sales representative was fast and rewarding. His thirst for knowledge was rewarded with the best territory from the company. Like his career, his personal life was very rewarding as well. He married a beautiful woman and eventually they had a son. But that is half the story.

    Dad in the beginning had a reserved taste for a vehicle that would take him from Portland, Oregon to his west coast adventures. He purchased a 1952 Chevrolet DeLuxe two door coupe. The 216 six was strong enough to pull him across the low lands and almost tough enough to conquer the hills through out the Northwest. As his territory grew, so did the hunger for the countries' thirst for an altered vehicle. He realized that as a sales rep for a burgeoning company in the paint industry, he should have a state of the art machine to make others take notice. One of his customers was a young man in Southern California named Larry Watson. Larry was a ball of talent and always asking questions that Dad would have to ask the chemists for technical information. As for a reward, Larry would steer Dad to having his plain Jane Chevrolet into a real eye pleaser. It started out small. Dad delivered a certain secret blend of candy paint to Larry, and in the following 24 hours, his Chevy was nosed and decked. Then came the radiused rear fender wells. A Martinez tuck and roll interior job was rewarded for a mention of Larry's shop in a factory bulletin. The little Chevy coupe was lowered, chromed reversed wheels, wide white wall tires. White tuck and roll interior with red piping and a '59 Impala steering wheel. The 216 was determined to be tired and a 292 Jimmy six with a trio of carbs and a split manifold and backed by a Corvette four speed, helped the little car sale like a yaught. In December of 1959, Dad had an extended stay in SoCal. A long meeting with the corporate higher ups and a public relations blitz. His salary was given a boost and it was released that he would start being the director of product advancement on the West coast. To add to his reward, his little coupe was rolled out. The friends he had helped advance with their ideas and determination had worked diligently on his coupe and had created a car that was a billboard for his hard work way out West. It was painted a deep pearl white while a brilliant candy red was sprayed on the wheel wells and the top and dash. Von Dutch hisself lettered Candy Cane just below the rear 1/4 windows, then striped the decklid and did a risque' pinup girl with a candy cane on the glove box door. Dad would later remove the glovebox door and place it into a Ked's shoe box and replace it with a chrome plated piece. He was always wary of offending Mom. Customs Illustrated called the car a ground breaker. Rod and Custom stated that Candy Cane was one of the top five for 1959. Hot Rod magazine ran an article on the engine and how to adapt a Corvette four speed to a Jimmy six. Everything for Candy Cane and Dad was like a dream it seemed. It would be short lived. As he packed up and got ready to head back to Oregon, the weather reports were calling for a severe storm and cold front heading for right for his route home. Undetermined, Dad climbed into Candy Cane, fired her up and disappeared into obscurity.
    The state patrol days later found tire tracks that were buried and seemed to vanish on highway 26. No wreckage was ever found. Dad just simply disappeared. Days went by and soon news of Dad's disappearance was on everybody's lips. In the February issue of Rod and Custom an article of his vanishing was mentioned by Neal East. And the letters and checks flooded in. Donations from Peterson publishing, the NHRA, George Barris sent a check. Then the paint company Dad had toiled for his short tenure sent a letter gifting me a scholarship and a pension to support Mom and myself. We survived, but I always stood that anniversary of that night at the foot of the driveway waiting for Dad to come home.

    Days pass. Years meld into one another. Friends and associates move on or just fade away. I grew and took that scholarship and studied and became a screen writer. I penned commercials, short films and was then given the chance to work on a prime time drama. My work was rewarded and I became a desired pen in the business. Late one November, I was alone in my office. I have a two pictures in my office. One of my Mom and the other of Dad standing next to Candy Cane. His smile is radiant. It is a bright sunny day in Portland, Oregon. I chuckle. Bright sunny days in Portland are not too common, but when the sky breaks, the Great North West is like none other. On a shelf above my scholarship and film awards is the glovebox door from Candy Cane. Bright and as resilient as the day Von Dutch striped it. I pushed myself from my desk, walked to my liquor cabinet and poured a shot of Pendleton whiskey. I took a drink and looked out of my office window. The hard night of Los Angeles was below my window. An array of bright lights and traffic that seemed alive as it snaked itself way through the concrete jungle. I killed my glass and called it a night.

    It was a week before the anniversary of Dad's disappearance and I decided to drive back to Portland for Christmas. I rented a Shelby Mustang convertible, packed my things and on a whim, for some reason, grabbed the glovebox door from Dad's '52. I planned my route for what Dad drove. This was not the first time I had driven this, but this time, it felt different. I stayed at highway speeds and took in my surroundings. I paused and ate at places that were not part of a chain. When I became weary, I stayed at the old style Motels that advertised colour TV. It was a slower journey than my regular route and it seemed to awaken my senses. I had just passed the Spirit Mountain casino when I saw a small sign advertising an estate sale at the local monastery. The sign was so small that i almost missed it. As an enthusiast of of old Hot Rod magazines, I decided to pull off and see what it was all about. I pulled the Mustang up and killed the engine. One of the brothers approached me with a grand smile, and he spoke, "Hello young man. You are the first to come to our sale!" He took my hands and asked, "What are you looking for?" I smiled and said, "Any old hot rod or old car stuff?"
    His smile broadened. "Come with me."
    We walked through the court yard and past a table full of trinkets for sale. He continued and we walked into a long hall way which led to a stairwell. We waked down two flights to a ground floor. He turned to me and then turned on an overhead light. In the center of the room was a car on jack stands and covered with very old canvas tarps. He stopped and asked, "You interested in old cars as well?" and he pulled the tarps off.
    And revealed my Dad's car.
    The paint was still in amazing condition. The tires seemed in good shape save for the flat left rear. Von Dutch's striping and lettering were still very vibrant and the Martinez interior was fully intact. I walked to the car and touched it. Smoothe metal.
    I ran my hand along the top of the door and to the rear fender. The candy red looked brilliant even though it was layered beneath years of dust. And then it hit me. Years of anguish and of loss. Sobs erupted from me. I felt my shoulders heave and shake. The brother rushed to me, concerned. He said, "Why are you so sad? This is a relic from our past! WE saved a young man who had no memory." I wiped my hands across my eyes. Saved a young man with no memory. I though of this. Left rear flat...bad snow storm.....Hmmmm... I asked the brother, "Was there a survivor?"
    He smiled.

    The January edition of Hot Rod DeLuxe hit the stands with the faded Rod and Custom cover picture of Candy Cane and the new picture of the as found car. The story was a lost and found/family reunion story. My Dad had been a mere 40 miles from home when a left rear tire went down. In a driving snow storm, he got out and was attempting to change the tire. As he pulled the spare out of the trunk, the wind gusted and the trunk slammed down on his head. Unconscious, he lie beside the car. A brother from the monastery saw the headlights and a figure beside the car. He sounded an alarm and the brethren rushed to his aid. The car was towed and stored. The man was put into a wing of the monastery and he was nursed back to health. Save for his memory.
    Enter me.
    My visit that day to the monastery was the key. As I talked to the brother he informed me that the driver was still alive and to this day on the grounds. I was led to a small out building where the old man lived. He was the grounds keeper and maintance man for the property. He repaired the tractors, staff vehicles and kept the old place in great shape. He had no memory of his past or where his family was. His eyes were like I remembered. He was busy working on a Fordson tractor. The distributor cap was off and his rugged fingers were massaging the points to bring the fire back to the old tractor.
    I paused.
    Looked at the brother and said, "Be right back!"
    I ran back to the my rental car and grabbed the glovebox. I had a theory and it may just work. I rushed back to the lean to where he worked on the tractor. I slowed and walked up to him. I pulled the glove box door out and said, "Mom would not approve of this and why do you have me out so late, Dad?" His grey eyes which were so focused on the mechanical deed at hand lifted and took in the glove box door, then focused on me. 54 long years washed past. It is said that sometimes someone who is in the fog of amnesia can be released with a name or a visual.
    A voice.
    Dad was brought back to me with the glovebox door and my voice.
    "Son?" He asked.

    Think of all the years that have passed. The years of lost birthdays and holidays. The decades of lost "I love you's" and such.
    Time of sharing.
    Time.

    It was December 54 years later, and in a moment, a spoken word, my Dad was brought back to me.

    -written in December of 2013, by Mark "Spooky" Karol-Chik
     

    Attached Files:

  27. So cool!
     
  28. KoolKat-57
    Joined: Feb 22, 2010
    Posts: 3,076

    KoolKat-57
    Member
    from Dublin, OH

    Great story!
    Just what I needed on a Cold Christmas Eve!
    KK
     
  29. woodbutcher
    Joined: Apr 25, 2012
    Posts: 3,310

    woodbutcher
    Member

    :D Outstanding sir.Thank you.
    Good luck.Have fun.Be safe.
    Leo
     
  30. 48fordnut
    Joined: Nov 4, 2005
    Posts: 4,215

    48fordnut
    Member Emeritus

    Life is sometimes a mystery. Good story.
    You have a talent. Merry Christmas.
     

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