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Painted barns help celebrate cultural pride in Appalachian quiltmakers

Artists or DIYers often arrange small pieces of barn wood in various shapes and stains in a rustic frame. The result is a beautiful display of patterns, typically with the wood’s natural knots and grains exposed. These geometric, weathered wall hangings can help homeowners achieve that updated farmhouse look, and they also clearly evoke quilt squares, including those painted on barn sides as part of the American quilt trail movement.

Much of modern farmhouse style — the shiplap, natural materials and distressed finishes popularized by magazines and shows such as HGTV’s “Fixer Upper” — evokes a simpler time in a vague, nostalgic way. But barn wood art, the latest farmhouse decor peppering your social media feeds, has a very specific and fascinating provenance: a community organizer in Adams County, Ohio.

Barn wood art is generally fashioned from repurposed wood, often from condemned barns. Artists or DIYers arrange small pieces of wood in various shapes and stains in a rustic frame. The result is a beautiful display of patterns, typically with the wood’s natural knots and grains exposed. These geometric, weathered wall hangings can help homeowners achieve that updated farmhouse look.

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