The Barn Journal

Notes for horse people who like to buy well

What is the Horse Art blog?

It is an ongoing collection of plain, hands-on notes for horse people: how to choose equestrian wall art, buy gifts that actually get used, and build a working barn grooming kit. It is honest buying guidance, not veterinary or fit advice; check anything that affects a horse's health with your vet or farrier.

Plain, hands-on buying guidance for riders, barn owners, and the people who shop for them. No hype, no fabricated tests; just the things worth knowing before you spend. Written by Brandon Rodriguez, Founder, ColabContent LLC.

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Questions

About these notes

How often is the Horse Art blog updated?
We add new notes when there is something genuinely useful to say about choosing equestrian art, buying horse-lover gifts, or kitting out a barn. The goal is durable, accurate guidance rather than churn, so each post is written to stay useful over time, with anything that changes by product or season flagged as something to verify.
Is the blog written by a real person?
Yes. Every post is written by Brandon Rodriguez, founder of ColabContent LLC and the editor behind Horse Art. The voice is a plain-spoken, hands-on buying guide for riders and the people who shop for them. Posts are general information, not veterinary, fit, or safety advice.
Does Horse Art test the products it writes about?
These are research-based buying guides written with honest, consistent criteria, not lab tests, and we say so plainly. We do not publish fabricated test numbers, fake reviews, or invented prices. Where a detail changes by product or listing, we tell you to check the current listing yourself.
How does Horse Art make money?
Horse Art is reader-supported. Some links are Amazon affiliate links, so we may earn a small commission when you buy through them at no extra cost to you. As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases. We only point to gear we would put in our own barn.

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.