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Paradise Island Apartments

Paradise+Island+Apartments

12/30/2001 - Paradise Island
5430 Rosemead Boulevard • Pico Rivera, California

I nearly locked the brakes on my poor car when I spotted this amazing tiki apartment building on Rosemead boulevard. I quickly pulled onto a side street and parked to take some photos.

Jack's Whittier Restaurant Sign

Jack%27s+Whittier+Restaurant+Sign

12/30/2001 - Jack's Whittier Restaurant
13221 Whittier Boulevard • Whittier, California

Although the coffee shop itself has lost any Googie character it may have once had, the Jack's sign has held up nicely over the years.

Dal Rae Restaurant

Dal+Rae+Restaurant

12/30/2001 - Dal Rae Restaurant

9023 Washington Boulevard • Pico Rivera, California

Opened in 19581, the Dal Rae looks like a great restaurant inside and out; See the Dal Rae web site for photos of the dining areas.

1 The Dal Rae Story. Dal Rae Restaurant. 31 Jan 2002. <http://www.dalrae.com/about.htm>

Tastee Freez

Tastee+Freez

12/30/2001 - Tastee Freez

127 N. Asuza Ave • Covina, California

I believe the orange A-Frame design pegs this as one of the original Tastee Freez restaurants, but never having had them around central Massachusetts (at least, not that I knew of) I can't say for sure.

Covina Bowl (II)

Covina+Bowl+%28II%29

12/30/2001 - Covina Bowl

1060 West San Bernardino Road • Covina, California

Closeup of the bowling alley's stylish sign.

Midas Muffler Man (I)

Midas+Muffler+Man+%28I%29

12/30/2001 - 15130 Whittier Blvd • Whittier, California

The first Muffler Man I've seen in greater Los Angeles who is actually holding a muffler.

Can't Blog - Painting

My wife gave me an excellent Shag t-shirt for Christmas along with another 1950's collecting guide/photo reference, and suddenly I'm all interested in design and even digital illustration again.Not much to write for tonight. I Put up another good photo of the Safari Inn sign from yesterday.

I spent most of the evening diddling around with Painter 6. After 5 comfortable years spent using Adobe (and to a lesser extent, Macromedia) interfaces, Painter is positively confounding.

Plus there's the added strangeness of not having actually painted since high school. I got pretty good with acrylics, but didn't stick with them when I pursued animation in college. So it's like learning to paint again through the layer of abstraction added by drawing on a tablet and seeing the results on the screen; the lack of immediate, physical feedback is disconcerting. But I shall persevere.

Also, go visit Shag's site. Go there right now. No finishing up your e-mail or reading The Onion, just go. And if you're going to be in L.A. next month, go see his exhibition, Bottomless Cocktail, at the La Luz De Jesus gallery in Hollywood. I missed the Night of the Tiki exhibition last fall, so I'm looking forward to this one.

I first came across Shag in an article in Juxtapoz a few months ago. I know I'd seen his stuff somewhere before that, but that was the first time I learned that there was an illustrator who specializes pretty much exclusively in exactly the kind of retro-tiki-lounge stuff I like. The Night of the Tiki book has been on my Amazon Wishlist ever since I saw that article, but my wife gave me an excellent Shag t-shirt for Christmas along with another 1950's collecting guide/photo reference, and suddenly I'm all interested in design and even digital illustration again.

Things have come a long way since I used to painstakingly draw 32 color, 320x240 scenes on my Amiga 500 in DeluxePaint IV and although I'm way out of practice, I know I'll be able to blow my older stuff away in time. That boxy old mouse has nothing on a pressure-sensitive tablet.

Safari Inn

Safari Inn

Safari Inn - 1911 West Olive St, Burbank, California

A wonderfully preserved sign presides over the classic 1950's motel, which you may recognize as one of the filming locations for True Romance. Be sure to visit 8 Ball, a retro clothing and accessories store located across the street.

Safari Inn Sign

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12/26/2001 - A closer shot of the Safari Inn's sign, taken from underneath the sun deck.

Note the inward-curving sides of the swimming pool, matching the shape of the sign.

Unfortunately, the desk clerk told me I couldn't actually go up on the deck to take photographs. I'm not sure whether it was a liability issue, or if they thought I was going to be somehow profiting from it. Places around Los Angeles are sometimes cagey about letting you take photos without some kind of release. They didn't say anything when I was shooting from the ground, though.

Dumpster Diving on Christmas Morn

Our apartment building and its identical twin next door have been getting repainted for the last month and a half. This is mostly a good thing; the color scheme since we moved in has been a lovely battleship grey with dusty blue-grey trim and doors. The new color scheme is white with dark green trim, and it certainly does lighten things up a bit.

Along with the paint, though, have come a couple of less graceful renovations. The first was the installation of some new light fixtures outside everybody's apartment doors. The old ones had become mismatched over the years, but the original fixtures had these great cone-shaped shades and complemented the building's late-40's architecture perfectly. We were lucky enough to have one of these outside our door.

The new light fixtures are these ugly, oval things that more closely resemble drop-lights than residential fixtures. And because they're using those newfangled compact fluorescent bulbs, it's like having a searchlight outside your door.

I don't know what happened to the fixtures they took down; I'm assuming they were thrown away, but I saw no sign of them in the dumpster the night after they made the switch.

The other clumsy renovation was the replacement of our mailboxes. Now, these definitely needed some kind of improvement; they were so small that anything more than a couple of bills and a few circulars would result in half of your mail getting ripped as you yanked it out of the box. But what the contractors did was terrible; they ripped out the old mailboxes, slapped pieces of plywood over the recess in the wall, and mounted these new aluminum boxes on top of the plywood without bothering to refinish the wall at the gaps around the edges of the plywood. So where there were once nicely recessed mailboxes that matched the style of the building, there are now these big, shiny boxes sticking about 12 inches out of the wall, with ugly gaps on either side where the plywood doesn't quite cover the hole where the old mailboxes used to be.

The most ominous change that I noticed happened to the other building, which got repainted first. High up on that building's facade was a sign labeling the building as "Sherman House" - similar to the sign on our own building reading "Sherman Terrace". Both signs were rendered in a classic postwar pseudo-script of the type which graces older signs and buildings all over L.A. About a week after they finished painting the walls and trim of Sherman House I noticed that the sign was gone. I held onto hopes that they would repaint the sign and put it back up, but as the weeks went by it seemed pretty clear that the sign was gone for good.

As they began to paint our building, I kept a close eye on the "Sherman Terrace" sign. One morning last week I noticed the sign laying in an unceremonious pile in front of the building; it had been taken down to facilitate repainting the front wall. It lay there up until yesterday afternoon, when I saw one of the painters pile it into a shopping cart and wheel it back behind the building. I didn't follow him, and thought perhaps they were going to repaint this one, since it was lower on the facade than the "Sherman House" sign and thus easier to put back up.

Nothing doing. I spotted the sign in the dumpster last night. My immediate inclination when I saw the sign sitting on the ground last week was to grab it then and save it from its brother's fate, but I held off lest they really did put it back up. Now that it was in the dumpster it was fair game, and I resolved to save it as soon as it was light out again. It's currently sitting under a tarp in front of our parking space in the car port, awaiting some minor repairs and a couple of coats of Dutch Boy Molokai Blue paint.

Aside from the obvious cool/kitsch factor of having this sign hanging on a wall somewhere in the apartment, the notion of saving the sign from some anonymous landfill took on the importance of a holy mission as soon as I noticed the other sign missing. I am haunted by my experience with the Sundown Drive-In Theatre, and although I could never have saved a part of the Sundown, I could save the sign from our own apartment building.

I discovered the Sundown quite by accident in September of 1998. I had to run an errand in Whittier, A city I had never been to before and wouldn't have much reason to visit again... I drove east around a curve on Washington Boulevard and came face to face with the giant screen of the Sundown. It was a beautiful old place, built in 1954 and closed as a drive-in in 1990. After two years in Los Angeles, I had driven by my fair share of 50's architecture, but the Sundown was the best-preserved example of high-1950's exuberance I had ever seen. By the time I saw it, it wasn't even being used as a swap meet any more, although I didn't know it at the time. I managed to return to the Sundown once more that month to take some photos with my low-quality, blurry Casio QV-100 digital camera.

At some point during the year that followed, those pictures got lost due to a hard drive failure (or possibly sheer file mismanagement.) I'd had my excellent Olympus digicam for about a month when I decided to take a Sunday afternoon and drive down to Whittier to get some proper photos of the old drive-in. Before I left I did a quick internet search on the Sundown to find an address to feed to Mapquest, and that was how I found out the Sundown had been torn down 8 months earlier. I still get crestfallen just thinking about it. So profound was the impression the Sundown made on me that for a while I named my erstwhile freelance pseudo-business and web site after it. I eventually dropped it, because the best domain I could get was sundown-media.com, which was too close to sundownmedia.com (An adult web site company, as it turns out) for comfort. And the domain I really wanted was sundown.com, which somebody in Ohio has been squatting on for years now.

The loss of the Sundown Drive-in is a little easier to bear after salvaging a piece of Sherman Terrace. Like some twisted variant of Gift of the Magi, it was a merry Christmas morning indeed. I saved a bit of classic Los Angeles and picked up a one of a kind wall decoration at the same time.

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Andy Chase
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