I once smoked cigars, back when I had money to burn. Cigar boxes are great for altering. Then came the career change and I switched to an occasional pipe, and no longer were boxes in ready supply. Instead I have an increasing pile of round tobacco tins, as I was sure I would find a use for them (other than hoarding screws in them that is). Well yesterday I had a spark of inspiration (I blame the new medication) and I’ve spent some time using skills with a piercing saw that I picked up at college. A pierced celtic knot allows the contained pot-pourri pong to escape and gives tantalising glimpses of the bits ‘n’ bobs included. Perfect piece of pungent upcycling!
Top tips:
- Find stencil patterns to adapt – that way you know whole chunks you wanted to keep won’t suddenly fall into the bin
- Remove all labels and adhesive from the tin before you start cutting
- Use a decent piercing saw and a blade with high number of teeth per inch for a smooth cut – change regularly even if you don’t manage to break the blade
- Use a jeweller’s bench peg to work on as it’s so much safer and easier
- Regularly clean your cutting surface of the metal burrs – I didn’t at the start and that’s what has sanded off the gold around the edge
- Mark the cutting lines on the inside of the lid and cut upside down as well – this reduces the bounce of the metal as you can hold it closer to the bench peg
- Work from the middle out to help keep everything as rigid as possible
- If you need to flatten out the final piercing, hit with a flat hammer onto a flat surface a couple of times.