We must have driven past this old barn off Route 12 near Wauconda, Ill., 100 times, but it wasn't until the owner repainted it white and added an American flag that we really took notice.
And when we did, we tried to challenge ourselves by stretching for a new perspective.
Walking the property, we almost fell over what I'm guessing is an old concrete property line marker.
So we decided to work it into the composition. 
It took a few frames before we got it just right, but I'm pretty pleased with the outcome.
We'll make it available in the barns gallery on our web site, www.ernestjschweitphotography.com.
Enjoy!

.We received some much appreciated exposure for our Wisconsin barn photography from the online magazine, Ozaukee Magazine. Here's a link. They focused on our work that's being shown at the Cedarcreek Pottery in Cedarburghttp
http://www.ozaukeemag.com/wisconsin-barns/
As a personal challenge, we decided to re-imagine an image from our New England photo trip last summer.
So we gave this straight forward barnscape a shot in black and white. I won't go into all the technical manipulations that went into the conversion process--email me and I'll be happy to share--but nearly two hours later, well…here it is….what do you think?
Apologies for the lengthy time between posts, but its been a busy summer, with kids visiting, playing catchup with the house, etc. We did manage to sneak away for a motor trip to Asheville, N.C., and to see family in Kentucky.
Along the way, we found this old place near Wellington, Ky.
Even though we're supposed to post only midwest barns, we liked this one so much, we decided to move outside our geographic boundaries.
I love the contrast of the flower plantings and finely trimmed grass in the foreground against the weathered look of the old barn and its over grown surroundings.
Enjoy. There's more at www.ernestjschweitphotography.com
Enjoy!
We'll stray from our midwest locale once again and share this lovely barn in New England that we photographed last summer.
We were visiting family and had factored in three or four days to ramble Connecticut and Massachusetts looking for old barns.
This one literally jumped of the roadside with its wooded setting and colorful foundation plantings.
We included the old tree stump to give some depth to the image.
Its a real gem; one of my favorites!
More barn images are on our web site, www.ernestjschweitphotography.com

Sometimes the old barns we cherish become a secondary feature in a shot, like this one, which we made on a trip with my wife to Madison, Wisc. The line corn stalks beneath a white clouded fall sky in Varona grabbed our attention was we drove by; the old wooden barn faded into the background. We picked the horizontal crop to accentuate the line of corn leading to the old barn. More of our barns are at www.ernestjschweitphotography.com. We'll post this one there for purchase.
For two years, we traveled the backroads of  Wisconsin, making images of old barns and talking to farmers about their love of the land. Those images are published in "Wisconsin Barns." The book features 107 images organized by region and makes a great gift or moment. "Wisconsin Barns" is available for $14.95 plus shipping.  Copies signed by yours truly are available special order by emailing me at ernestjschweit@sbcglobal.net






I know that time of  year we should be posting images of snow clad barns in fields of white, but I've had just about enough of the cold weather here in the midwest.
So as luck would have it, I stumbled upon this lovely fall setting we captured in Varona, Wis.
My wife and I were headed back from the farmer's market in Madison; our itinerary for the day included some "barning." So off the main drag we drove until we found this.
We enhanced the clouds a bit with Lightroom 5.2 and decided on the horizontal crop because the expansive landscape seemed to suggest that treatment.
We'll post this image for purchase on the "American Barns" gallery of our web page, www.ernestjschweitphotography.com.

We spent a week this past summer on a photo tour of New England, looking for old barns to photograph.
Specifically, we visited small towns Massachusetts and Connecticut.
We created hundreds of images, which we will be posting in the days ahead.
This one is among my favorites, recorded on a hazy day that turned rainy a few seconds after making this shot.
We broke a couple of so-called rules to make this picture, most notably the one about not shooting into the sun.
We did it on purpose, just to see what we got, in this case an almost high-key effect in the sky, which worked well with the weathered old barn wood and green foliage.
The American flag hanging from the barn seemed to be common in this part of the world. We noticed it on lots of other barns we saw.
More of our barn images are on my Facebook page, Ernest J. Schweit, and on my website, www.ernestjschweitphotography.com



Swan Lake

It took three u-turns on a country road in McHenry County to get this image of an abandoned barn.
I was on my way back from scouting out locations for a wedding job when I came upon the Swan Lake Produce Barn.
The faded sign over the door grabbed me on my first trip past the old farmstead.
Then I noticed the stone foundation, not often seen in Illinois, but very common in Wisconsin.
Finally, the overgrown weeds nearby.
Perfect, I thought.
The perfect visual symbol of bygone days that our kids will know only in history books, if at all.
Enjoy the view!


The great thing about photography---as it is with any art form---is that  its a total expression of the artist. There are no right and wrong answers, which my students hear me say constantly, in an effort to free their minds to the possibilities.
So it was with this old silo, the third and final image from a recent series I made while traveling through Wisconsin.
In my rural landscape work, color is my mainstay, but more and more I'm seeing a visual appropriateness (is that a word?) in black and white.
To my way of seeing, black and white just seems to fit these old bastions on the prairie, like that comfortable pair of slippers we wear at the end of a long day in stiff dress shoes. The dress shoes look great, but the slippers...well, they feel great.
Anyways, more barns and samples of our other work is up on my portfolio web site, www.ernestjschweitphotography.com

The texture of weathered wood and patterns formed by a fieldstone foundation  drew us to make an image of  this old barn in Thiensville, Wisc.
This is another shot from our recent trip to drop off new work at Cedar Creek Pottery in Cedarburg, Wisc. We were fortunate to come away with this image, given our scheduling this day found us shooting right around noon, when light is harsh.
I should thank the great American photographer, David Plowden for giving me the courage to point my camera of barns like this.  
If you don't know him, David is famous for his image making of American farmland, steam trains and small towns. He was good enough to sign one of his books, "A Handful of Dust: the  Disappearing America," for me when we met a few years ago. On the cover is an abandoned storefront, a beautiful image. After seeing that, I figured, if David Plowden could do old storefronts, I could do barns! See David's work at www.davidplowden.com
More of my barns, plus other work is at www.ernestjschweitphotography.com

We were in Cedarburg, Wisc., the other day, dropping off new work to show at Cedar Creek Pottery, when we decided to do some backroads exploring.
A few minutes west of Thiensville, we stumbled upon this old barn and cement silo in a wonderful field of late spring grasses.
As you can see, this image captures the typical stone foundation found in most Badger state barns and some nice white clouds streaking the blue skies.
Our other work hasn't left us much time for "barning," so this shot was a nice way to get back in the groove.
By the way, if you are up in this area, stop by the Cedar Creek Pottery (www.cedarcreekpottery.com) gallery. its at n70 26340 Bridge Road to view our three new framed images, a handful of matted pieces and, of course, the fine pottery and other art owner Andee Warren has on view. 
We'll post more images from this trip and others are the schedule this summer. So stay tuned!
We snuck away during a recent family visit for a couple of hours "barning" in rural Virginia when we discovered this little gem in Purceville.
Ok, so its not the Midwest. But still.....
Our intention was to ramble about Loudon County, Va., looking for barns. Sadly, our rambles took us by many new subdivisions, but no barns.
Until we followed Route 7 west for a few more miles and found this old place.
Its actually not that old. In fact, it appears to have been converted to a flower business.
We were so excited to find it, we didn't remember to compose the shot so the white house wasn't in the frame.
Oh, well. Still a cool barn. We burned the edges a bit to add a slight pinhole look to the finished product.
Enjoy!
For more barn images, visit www.ernestjschweitphotography.com



 This window on an abandoned barn looked a little spookey when we first spotted it.
In fact, the whole farmstead looked uninviting to visitors, but for photographers...well it was a treasure trove of interesting images.
We converted this one to black and white then, for fun, we added some grain in an effort to make it look "old school." You know....like it was recorded on film. You remember that, right?
For more barn images, and other work, visit our web site: www.ernestjschweitphotography.com