Showing posts with label old barn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label old barn. Show all posts

Saturday, November 19, 2016

Red Barn on a Quiet Farm Landscape Painting





Red Barn on an Old Farm

This painting was inspired by the old red barns and white farmhouses that were once so common along the country backroads, that I love.  There is something so peaceful and pleasant about being out in the country on a quiet summers day!  I hope to capture that in my paintings of summer time in the beautiful American Heartland.     

Please visit my web site for more info. on this and my other farm paintings and country landscape art.

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Snow out my window today!


Here is a photo that I just took of the view out the window that I paint near. We had a lot of grass showing this morning and you could see the gravel drive. The snow has come down quickly to change the looks of the landscape around here.   It was almost white out conditions earlier, but has let up for right now.  We need the moisture for the soil, so we are lucky to get it.  I have been busy getting a painting ready to send off to the "Animals in Art" Exhibit at the LSU School of Veterinary Medicine and working on an entry for another juried exhibition.  I have one of my miniature 4 x 6" paintings on the easel that I am in the midst of working on too. 

Thursday, February 14, 2013

Recycled Barn Out My Window






Here is the view of the top of my easel, looking out the window that I paint near.  Our old barn is very lucky to still be standing.  It almost went down in a bad spring storm that we had in the area almost 22 years ago now.   It was what they term a "Microburst" instead of a tornado.  Despite what it was named, it did take down several other old barns, on farms within a few miles of us, and left our barn badly leaning, but still standing.  We found a great family business, construction company in the area, that worked on old barns.  They used a system of telephone poles and cables, to pull the barn back into position, and then adding reinforcing at key points, to keep the barn standing straight again. 

This old barn was built in the 1920's and some of the old wooden beams in it were recycled from an earlier barn.  You can see the notches in some of them that obviously don't match up with any others in the barn.  We don't know if the beams came from a previous barn on this old farmstead, or were brought in from somewhere else.    

See my original farm paintings currently for sale: FRANCE GALLERY

Subscribe to this blog France Gallery ~ American Heartland Landscape Paintings by Email