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Ted Arellanes looks at work

Pioneers in Punched Tin

Ted & Ginny Arellanes


Ted & Ginny Arellanes have been making punched tinwork together since 1990. Since then, they have become known as pre-eminent craftsmen in this traditional New Mexican art form. They have been teaching the craft with Continuing Education for about 11 years. They began teaching in response to many requests and intense interest from those intrigued by the craft and its popular appeal. Ted gazes with pride on a custom design, a punched tin book cover, left.

Ted & Ginny actually met while learning the art of stained glass in 1986. Their shared love for their new craft gave them a bond; they fell in love and were married. They spent their days waiting tables at the same restaurant in Old Town and making stained glass at night. The owner permitted them to hang some of their work in the restaurant, and soon it started to sell. This encouraged them as artists and entrepeneurs, and they opened a small gallery at Central and 14th St., where they sold their pieces as well as equipment. They started showing at arts & crafts shows, where they met the owner of a well-connected construction company, which led to their first commission from the La Fonda Hotel in Santa Fe, for stained glass work and the re-creation of original punched tin fixtures. Although they had never worked in tin, they took the job and then set out to learn how. Their pieces were so beautiful that the La Fonda became a repeat customer that they still retain today.

They were very resourceful in their pursuit of mastering the craft of tinwork; they invented their own processes by researching historic pieces and attempting to reproduce them. It was a labor of love to learn from the past. They dedicated uncounted hours to learning together, in love with the beauty of the material. They spent the kind of time on their craft that people bestowed on handwork in centuries past; before the telephone and the TV took away all of people’s time. Punched tin is very old in New Mexico; one of its first crafts in fact. Punched tinwork stands on its own or accents other traditional crafts of Hispanic New Mexico, such as retablos and wood furniture.

tin ceiling fixture

Ted & Ginny’s punched tinwork at the La Fonda generated a lot of interest; all sorts of people asked for classes. Their creations even piqued the interest of the Spanish Market, a very select and particular organization to enter. They were voted in, and after a few years of participation, their entry won first prize!

Ted rented time at a machine shop to make tools for punching tin. With their own tools ready for their students, they decided to offer classes; one in Santa Fe, and one in Old Town. Ted says they have taught one thousand or so people; but Ginny says, “way more.”

Ted & Ginny’s shop promulgates the knowledge of the craft and has become
the tool supplier for other tin artists throughout the state. Tinwork combines the use of basic hand tools with machinery. Tinsmiths were always clever and many of them have used machines to cut down on the manual labor of manufacturing. For instance, today the shop uses dies to punch out their tin and copper switchplates.

The Arellanes’ revival of an old New Mexico craft has created many opportunities for them to contribute to modern New Mexican culture, in special places such as the La Fonda Hotel in Santa Fe, Garduño’s, the Hispanic Cultural Center, the Santa Fe Chamber of Commerce, and countless landmarks and facilities throughout the state. Their work is the highlight in many architectural spaces known for their New Mexico ambience.

It was a chance encounter with the former Dean of UNM Continuing Education, Rupert Trujillo, that led to eleven years of popular classes in Early New Mexico Punched Tin Work with the Personal Enrichment Program.


Ted & Ginny teach:

Early New Mexico Punched Tin Work

Note: Titles above link to our online registration site, which does not post courses after they are held. Course lists are updated at the beginning of the semester. Depending on when you click a title on the list above, some items may have already passed. You may always refer to the course index or to the printed course catalog for course information.


Teach a class with us

Have you spent a lifetime of learning on a favorite subject? Is there something you can do that nobody else can do? You can teach a class with UNM Continuing Education!

Turn in a course proposal. (PDF file to download, instructions on the file.)

(If you need Adobe Acrobat Reader so you can see and print PDF's, click here to download it for free.)


Contact

For information call 277-6320 or email ddel@unm.edu

 

 

Summer class:
Early New Mexico Punched Tinwork

Ginny in shop with switchplates

Ginny smiles beside a rank of tin and copper switchplates in their tin shop. Punched tin lends rich detail to architectural features, stamping them “Southwestern.”

A light fixture at the Hispanic Cultural Center demonstrates the intrinsic elegance of punched tinwork, which means that something simple can have great presence. Students of Ted & Ginny’s class benefit from their years of experience and can take home something very presentable as their class project.

Bud-E the shop dog

Bud-E the shop dog takes a break while on duty at their tinworking shop in the North Valley. Bud-E just showed up at the shop about four months prior to this picture. “Hey, buddy,” they greeted him, and he’s been there ever since, a kindred spirit. Ted & Ginny enjoy the company of four dogs altogether.