Farm rustic 

689 creative works found

  • I liked the pattern and symmetry of this autumn field dotted by haybales in the Eastern Free State, South Africa.

  • I have no idea what this piece of old machiney is, so if anyone does know, please let me know. It must have been a wonder in its day! Awesome piece of history located just out of Walker Flat on the Murray River in South Australia. / . / / . / / . / / . / / . / / . /

  • Taken in 2004 in the beautiful farming community of Westcliffe, Colorado, at the foot of the majestic Sangre de Cristo Mountain range. This splendid restored old barn sat on a 160-acre ranch owned by our Georgia neighbors, the Irwins. Westcliffe sits adjacent to the historic mining town of Silver Cliff and both are at approximately 8000 feet in elevation. The sister towns are surrounded by more than one mountain range. To the west are the Sangre de Cristos at 14,000 feet in height. The Wet Mountains, Collegiate Mountains, and Spanish Peaks are respectively east, north, and south. You can’t beat the spectacular views! This is a winter view of the Irwin Barn. Please don’t copy or download this image. My photos may NOT be reproduced and/or used in any form without my written permission. If you want this photograph, I would be honored for you to purchase it. ©2008 Patricia Montgomery | Bucks Mountain Galleries All rights reserved.

  • At The Mountain Farm Museum,most of the structures were built in the late 19th century and were moved here in the 1950s. The Davis-Queen House offers a rare chance to view a log house built from chestnut wood before the chestnut blight decimated the American Chestnut in our forests during the 1930s and early 1940s. The museum is adjacent to the Oconaluftee Visitor Center,On the NC side of Hwy.441 in the Great Smoky Mountain National Park. The Davis/Queen house was originally located on Thomas Divide north of Bryson City along Indian Creek. Beginning about 1900, it was built by John E. Davis over a period of a couple years. The house was constructed from American chestnut trees. About 1917 the Davis’ sold their farm to a neighboring family, Joe Thad Queens, who owned the house at the time the land was purchased for inclusion in Great Smoky Mountains National Park. It has been described as “the finest example of the large log house in the park.” Davis was a master craftsman who built the house with the aid of his two boys. He “matched” the log walls by splitting a tree in half and using the resulting timbers on opposite sides of the structure. In addition to other duties, his sons, ages 8 and 4, respectively, collected stones for the chimney using a sled and oxen. It is the only log house in the Smokies with a decorative shingle pattern underneath the eaves. Poplar and Chestnut were usually used for the logs in the cabin due how they resist rot and decay.Oak was usually used for the shakes as it split, stright and thin, easier.

  • Old weather-beaten barn with weeds.

  • Cute billy goat peeking through the barn stall opening.

  • Barn decor…......the side of a barn in the Canadian Rockies, bleached by the sun, wind and rain and decorated with bits and pieces of rusty things.

  • “In Retirement”...is an original digital photograph. Taken with a Sony Full HD 1080 Cyber Shot camera. Thank You for viewing my art. VIEW susan’sgallery / VIEW susan’szazzle / !http://images-0.redbubble.net/img/art/border:blackwithdetail/product:laminated-print/size:medium/view:preview/1686342-4-in-retirement.jpg

  • My cesspool of knowledge about little red wagons has been spent on the previous images of this marvelous mode of transporting. For millenniums people have used the wagon in some form or another for transporting of goods and people. It wasn’t until the last couple centuries a self powered version came on the scene. The idea caught on quickly form the 1st steam powered buggies to all the wide range of transportation we have today. The improvements of the millenniums are nothing to compare with the rapid increase of technology in the past 200 years. I often wonder to what extent these rapid improvements in technology have degraded our ways of life. Are out morals and since of family what they use to be? Have our standards and codes of conduct decreased from what they were when wagons and sleds were the preferred mode of moving goods form place to place…..This wagon is sitting on the Tipton Place in Cades Cove ,Great Smoky Mountain NP

  • THis barn scene is in the North Carolina mountains near the community of Meat Camp. The nearby town of Boone was named for the explorer, Daniel Boone. According to regional history, his family had a meat camp near here. /

  • There is an old Historical piece of property on Jasper Road in Erie Colorado. It has a lot of old barn that have a wonderful orange rusty glow at sunset.

  • The ruins of an old farmhouse near Kanmantoo in the Adelaide Hills, South Australia.

  • A windmill and pond at Woodchester in the Adelaide Hills, a very beautiful town and location, something everyone needs to experience!

  • A BEAUTIFUL SUNNY DAY, BUT JUST A LITTLE TOO COLD AND SNOWY TO WORK THE GROUND.

  • HOUSING DEVELOPEMENTS HAVE GROWN UP AROUND THE REMNANTS OF A FARM NEAR FINDLAY, OHIO.

  • NEAR ARCADIA. OHIO

  • A SMALL FARM SHED IN ARCADIA, OHIO CAMERA: FUJI FINEPIX S2 PRO / LENS: SIGMA 28-80 MM @ 28 MM

  • THE 200TH ANNIVERSARY OF OHIO’S STATEHOOD WAS 6 YEARS AGO AND CERTAIN BARNS AROUND THE STATE WERE CHOSEN TO DISPLAY THIS BANNER. THIS ONE IS EAST OF FINDLAY, OHIO CAMERA: FUJI FINEPIX S2 PRO / LENS: SIGMA 28-80 MM @ 50 MM

  • TAKEN IN EAGLE TOWNSHIP, OHIO

  • Henriod homestead / Spring Valley – eastern Nevada / (2009.04.01) The “bench” is recycled from an old automobile seat; / the frame is made of wood RedBubble Album: Rusticana / Seat By The Window / Canon 350D EOS / Canon 18/55 mm

  • Featured in Tone It Down / (2009.NOV.06) “A Place To Call Home Series“ / / The Homestead III / (Sepia) / The Homestead / The Homestead II / (Subtle Color) RedBubble Album: Ranches and Homesteads*

  • A 3 Shot HDR Processed in Photomatix Pro, with flood filter added in Photoshop /

  • This rustic old farmstead in the Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina intrigues me. I wish I knew its history. My guess is that it was built in the late 1800s. / THe photo”Going Back” shows a different view of this same house. /

  • Interior photo of Cade’s Cove Missionary Baptist Church. THe church was established in 1839 and is a tourist site in the historic farm community of Cade’s Cove in Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Tennessee. / At one time there was a wood burning stove on the floor in the center of the church..

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