Featured Artist Lisa Tornello

Artist Lisa Tornello transforms upcycled metal into delightfully colorful handmade jewelry and collage art. Visit her website to see more of her work.

 

bird themed pin made with tin collage

“Bird Pin” recycled tin from five different containers, rivets, tie-tack back

 

I am a jewelry artist who, prior to the pandemic, worked primarily in Argentium sterling silver and semi-precious gemstones. Once Covid hit and craft shows shut down, I was left with a lot of inventory, so it made no sense for me to make more silver jewelry. I was going a little stir-crazy not having a creative outlet. Then a good friend gave me a Burt’s Bees gift set for Christmas.

 

earrings made from upcycled tin

“Double Earrings” recycled tin from a tin pencil case and a decorative tin with a hot air balloon scene, sterling silver

 

As I was taking the products out of the tin, I was getting ready to throw the container into my recycle bin. I thought, “What a shame!” because it was beautiful—a stunning ocher with an overall geometric design. Then I thought, “Heck, I work with metal so there ought to be something I can make with this instead of just throwing it out!”

 

Boldly designed earrings made with upcycled tin

“Quadruple Earrings” recycled tin from a candy tin, a Brighton gift tin, a tea tin and a cosmetic tin, sterling silver

 

For the next year, while the rest of the world was spiraling out of control from Covid, I was holed up in my basement. I immersed myself in experimenting with a brand new medium.

 

upcycled tin collage pendant necklace

“Necklace” recycled tin from six different containers, Argentium sterling silver, sterling neck cable

 

To be clear, I do not paint the tin designs. I use post-consumer decorative tin containers that I have bought in thrift stores or received as gifts. Think tea tins, cookie/candy tins, lunch boxes, trays, even trashcans. I then deconstruct them, hand-cut, file, sand, drill, dome and rivet them into fun and funky, featherweight, one-of-a-kind jewelry.

 

upcycled tin earrings, handmade

“Triple Earrings” recycled tin from a cookie tin, a Brighton gift tin and a candle tin, sterling silver

 

It started with some simple, single piece earrings. I soon became obsessed with all the colors and patterns. I began mixing and matching different tins together, until suddenly I was making doubles, triples and even quadruple pieced earrings.

 

upcycled tin collage wearable pin

“Abstract Pin” recycled tin from three different containers, rivets, tie-tack back

 

Always aiming to challenge myself, I graduated to pins. Once I discovered how to use the rivet gun I inherited from my father, I went even larger and 3-dimensional with necklaces.

 

mixed media tin collage necklace

“Necklace” recycled tin from six different containers, rivets, Argentium sterling silver, wooden beads

 

I can never say no to a gifted tin from friends, so I have ended up with a lot of tins that don’t really lend themselves to jewelry. I thought of creating some artwork with them and that’s how my new recycled tin bird collages came to be. Everything but the screws and nails are recycled material. Even the wood substrates they are built on are from old bureau drawers I found on the street.

 

Colorful handmade upcycled tin collage necklace

“Necklace” recycled tin from one Neiman Marcus popcorn tin, rivet, Argentium sterling silver, sterling neck cable

 

I use a lot of the same traditional metalsmithing techniques that I use making my silver jewelry. But instead of working with a torch, the tin creations are made using all cold-connections. Tin isn’t malleable like silver. It is a lot less forgiving, but I am really enjoying working with the endless colors and patterns and being able to work big without worrying that the piece will be too heavy.

 

bird themed collages handmade in tin

Tin collages “The Visitation 2″ 4.75″ x 7.75” and “Jersey Bird” 5″ x 8″

 

Most of all, I love the idea of being a more sustainable artist by repurposing material that already had a life as one thing and creating something new out of it, thereby giving it a second life. It’s true what they say—one person’s trash is another’s treasure!

 

Lisa Tornello invites you to follow on Instagram

 

 

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