Really sad about this one....
black mamba
Registered Users Posts: 8,323 Major grins
I first posted this shot about 5 or 6 years ago. I made it clear in the posting that the surface you see....excepting the raised window frames and the recessed door....is absolutely flat, no curvatures, nothing. It still mesmerizes me. It rates as one of my favorite barn shots ever. Well, it's gone. Hardly a trace left behind. That fact is often the sign that the barn-wood scavengers got it. Often, those guys will agree to clean up the site when they have gotten all that they want.
This is another shot of the barn I didn't post before.
I always wanted to lie naked on a bearskin rug in front of a fireplace. Cracker Barrel didn't take kindly to it.
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Oh! What a shame, thank you for immortalizing it, absolutely great shots! I had not seen these before, I think they are my favorite barn shots of all times.
www.mind-driftphoto.com
Thanks, Cristóbal, for your comments and support.
Relative to the second shot, not seen before, it bears close scrutiny. If you remove that wall extension that supports the three metal signs. along with those two broad support panels, the rest of what you see is a solid, flat wall. I mean it almost got a little spooky.
First image rocks! At least you have it, and the farmer doesn't.
Land owners have been learning about the value of old barn timbers and have been selling their run-down barns to high bidders. Especially lately, as the resource is progressively more scarce. There's value in that old stuff for woodworkers and remodeling jobs.
"You miss 100% of the shots you don't take" - Wayne Gretzky
Thanks for the visit, David. You're absolutely right about the increase in wood scavenging. I've seen a lot more of that activity in the last couple of years. I was at a huge sale recently in S.E. Tennessee that featured old farm equipment. There were two booths at the show devoted exclusively to old barn wood.
Yeah these things fall.
Not only that, there are SO MANY trees, that have in the past yielded good shots for me and they fall down,. killing the shot.
Not that I have even looked at my camera for 1.5 years, but still remember the disappearing trees well.
Always bummed when that happens.
Tom...
A wonderful shot of a beautiful structure.
Culturally significant structures disappearing almost literally before your eyes. Another one for the book!
El Gato
www.globaltrekk-photos.com
You know, my friend, when you decide to touch your camera gear again, you'll find a slew of folks applauding.
Thanks, Al.
It really hit home on my last foray up to the Appalachians. Checking out some of my favorite areas, I was stunned to see the demise of so many structures I've shot in the past. I know it's going to happen, apparently at an increasing rate, but it depresses me. My wife asked why I was a little bit low. I told her that I didn't want to be relegated to shooting toadstools. She gave me the most blank look I've ever seen.
Moderator of the Cameras and Accessories forums
Glad you tuned in, Ziggy. It's always nice to have you drop by. What can I say? Maybe one of life's most precious moments.
Chestnut and other non or slowly rotting woods are used to build barns round here, anyway. Makes the wood valuable because, as with chestnut, there won't be any more
The hands of time seem to write their passage by the rendering of old barns.
I salute your images of old barn wood.
I, too, have watched numerous barns decay, and slowly fall away in my lifetime. It always seems sad to see the how transient each barn is in this world.
Here's a barn I captured in Indiana while it was decaying back in February 2004, 18 years ago. It has been gone for over a decade now. Sadly, old wooden barns are being replaced with sheet metal and pole barns that are not nearly as attractive, even if they are more weather resistant.
One of the things I really like about photography, is the ability to capture images for long periods of time.
Moderator of the Technique Forum and Finishing School on Dgrin
Hey, Will. I've got a good friend up in the mountains who is a master craftsman. He has got a cache of old chestnut wood and he has said for a long time that he wants to build our kitchen cabinets out of that wood for us when we get the new home up there underway.
Many thanks for the visit and comments. That's a great barn shot you took. The accelerated demise of these old structures spurs me on to record as many of them as I can while I can. Take care.