Equestrian art and horse prints
Equestrian art ranges from inexpensive open-edition prints to signed limited editions and one-off originals.
What this is
Horse Art is an independent guide to equestrian art, English and Western tack, stable gear, and horse-lover gifts, with hand-picked buying advice for riders, barn owners, and the people who shop for them.
Equestrian art, tack & gifts
The equestrian art, tack, and gift guide for people who live around horses.
Horse-Art.com is an online equestrian store and buying guide offering horse-themed art, gifts, tack, and home decor for horse lovers and riders. It organizes everything by who you are shopping for and what corner of the barn you are outfitting, leading with how to choose well before pointing to specific products.
Browse by category
Independent buying advice and gift ideas, written by people who actually muck stalls. Pick a category to start.
Equestrian art ranges from inexpensive open-edition prints to signed limited editions and one-off originals.
Tack is the gear that connects rider and horse: the saddle, bridle, bit, girth or cinch, and pads.
The best horse-lover gifts match the person's specific world: the discipline they ride, the breed they keep, and whether they are a competitor, a backyard owner, or someone who simply loves the animal.
Equestrian jewelry covers everything from everyday horseshoe pendants and snaffle-bit bracelets to sterling silver pieces, Western belt buckles, and keepsakes braided from a horse's own tail.
Good barn gear is the quiet difference between a tidy, safe stable and a daily scramble.
Rider apparel is part safety gear, part daily uniform.
Feeders earn their keep two ways on horse property: hay feeders and slow-feed nets cut waste and slow fast eaters, which supports gut health, while backyard bird feeders bring the barnyard to life.
Day-to-day horse health comes down to a few well-chosen supports: joint and mobility care for working and aging horses, grooming that keeps skin and coat healthy, and a stocked first-aid kit for the small emergencies that always happen.
Equestrian media splits into four useful buckets: instructional training titles, breed and discipline references, family and children's stories, and documentaries or films for the armchair horse lover.
Running horse property is mostly the work that happens outside the barn: watching the weather, marking and securing the place, and keeping outdoor structures sound.
Horse-loving kids are easy to delight and easy to over-buy for.
Barn dogs and farm pets live a tougher life than house pets, so their gear has to be tougher too.
Buying guides
Research-based shortlists with honest criteria, comparison tables, and picks for every budget. Start with the gifts for horse lovers guide, or see all buying guides.
The best gift for a horse lover is the one that proves you noticed the specific horse, discipline, or barn they love, not a generic galloping-herd trinket.
The best horse wall art is the piece that matches the breed or discipline you connect with, fits the wall it lives on, and is printed to last where you hang it.
The best horse gifts under 50 dollars are the ones that feel chosen rather than cheap, which means picking a useful object with one clear equine detail over a pile of trinkets.
The best equestrian jewelry depends on whether it is for everyday wear around horses or a dressier keepsake for a show, a milestone, or a gift.
Why Horse Art
Most equestrian shopping sites bury you in listings and hope you click something. We do the opposite. Every guide here starts with how to choose well: what fits, what lasts, what matters for the horse, and what is a waste of money. The product picks come after the advice, clearly marked, so you always know why something made the list.
We cover the whole property, not just the show ring: art for the home, English and Western tack, stable and barn gear, health and joint care, feeders, and gifts for the horse lover who already owns three of everything.
Horse Art is reader-supported. Some links on this site are affiliate links, which means we may earn a small commission when you buy through them, at no extra cost to you. We only point to gear we would put in our own barn.