HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – Oswalt-Sanchez owns Tin Can Mailman, tucked into Honoluluâs Chinatown along NuÊ»uanu Avenueâa shop where history doesnât sit behind glass.
âGenerations progress, and they age out; people donât realize how special some of this older stuff is,â says Christopher Owalt-Sanchez. âItâs all little, tiny pieces that if we donât talk about and we donât share, itâs going to be forgotten.â
Itâs stacked, shelved, and cataloged in the form of everyday artifacts: vintage canned food labels, old travel brochures, restaurant menus, and movie lobby cards that once helped sell an evening at the theater.
Inside, youâll find lobby cards advertising films shot in HawaiÊ»i or centered on island lifeâbright, nostalgic snapshots from a time when going to the movies was an event.
âThis is back when movie theaters only had one screen, and the lobby was like a very posh, sort of, like a nicer hotel lobby,â Owalt-Sanchez explains. âSo, they would utilize every little bit of space. So, these would have been in the lobby, and they would have been advertisedâa movie that could have only played one night or a movie that was coming.â
The shop also holds travel brochures from United Airlines and Aloha Airlines, along with menus from restaurants that helped define eras of WaikÄ«kÄ« diningâbut are now long gone. Names like Ciroâs, Lau Yee Chai, and Tops live on in print, offering a glimpse into what people ordered, what it cost, and what âa night outâ looked like decades ago.
âYou know, you go to a lot of places now, new places that are opening upâthe menus are digital. You scan a QR code,â he says. âHere, weâve actually got the menu. You can see what people were eating. You can see how much it costs and think, thatâs really interestingâthat you can get, you know, a double bourbon for 25 cents.â
And itâs not just paper ephemeral. Tin Can Mailman is also home to collectibles and curiosities that blur the line between souvenir and storyâobjects that spark memories for some and discoveries for others.
A Shop With a Story of Its Own
Even Tin Can Mailmanâs name comes with historyâand the business has traveled nearly as much as the items it sells.
âWell, the Tin Can Mailman originally opened in the 1970s in a town called Arcata, California. It was originally a bookstore,â Owalt-Sanchez says. After a divorce, the original owners split: âThe lady kept her Tin Can Mailman in Arcata, and the man took his Tin Can Mailman to KauaÊ»i, opening in the mid-1980s.â
Over the years, the store moved through roughly five locations on KauaÊ»i. The owner sold it in 2003, died in 2005, and the shop eventually made its way to OÊ»ahuârelocating to Chinatown in November 2009. The Arcata store, Owalt-Sanchez adds, still exists today, but the two are no longer connected.
So why âTin Can Mailmanâ?
âHe named it after an island in Tonga, where they would take the mail and weld it shut in big tin biscuit cans or cookie cans,â he explains. âAnd the men would swim out to the passing ships and deliver the mail and get the new mail and then bring it back to the island. And those were the tin can mailmen.â
The practice dates back more than a century, he saysâfirst as a necessity, later as a novelty, even evolving into what was known as âtin can canoe mail.â
Keeping the Details From Disappearing
Owalt-Sanchez says Tin Can Mailman has sourced items from all over the world.
âTin Can Mailman has bought things as far away as Argentina and as close as across the street,â he says.
But for him, the point isnât simply collectingâitâs connecting. He sees each label, menu, card, and brochure as a fragment of lived experience, especially as older generations fade and their everyday stories go with them.
âI like to tell you about what the industry was like in the 40s, what was selling in the 40s, what people were sending home,â he says. âBecause that generation is, you know, slowly disappearing. And if we donât talk about it, itâs just gone. Thatâs all, little pieces of love and little pieces of light that are just float away into the wind.â