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Equine Photography: Elisabeth Panepinto

Elisabeth Panepinto is a young photographer from Belgium. Her work is extraordinary in the way she is able to so effectively capture the dazzling beauty of the equine form. Both her black and white and her color photographs are stunning. I love the unique ways in which she orients and crops her compositions. She is definitely a talent to be looking out for in the coming years. I would love to own a huge coffee table book featuring her work.

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Elisabeth Panepinto Photography

Elisabeth Panepinto Photography

Elisabeth Panepinto Photography

Elisabeth Panepinto Photography

Elisabeth Panepinto Photography

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Find more of Elisabeth Panepinto’s photography here:
Website:
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Equine Photography: Francesca Morrison

Francesca Morrison is an up-and-coming photographer based in Glasgow, Scotland. She is currently studying photography at Reid Kerr college and has photographed popular equine events including the Hickstead Derby and RIHS. Her gorgeous photographs included in this post just give a preview of her talent! Check out her website () or her Facebook Page () to view more of her stunning images.

Francesca Morrison Photography

Francesca Morrison is passionate about equine photography. All riders understand that there is something very special about the relationship between horse and rider. Francesca aims to capture the essence of this relationship. Whether a client seeks the exhilaration of horse and rider striving together in competition or more formal equine portraiture, Francesca will always aim to reveal the heart and soul of the unique bond at the centre of equestrian relationships. —

Francesca Morrison Photography

Francesca Morrison Photography
Francesca Morrison Photography
Francesca Morrison Photography
Francesca Morrison Photography

Again, more of Francesca Morrison’s gorgeous work can be found here:
Website:
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The Story Behind Equestrian Culture Magazine

“Equestrian Culture discovers the best style, art and small businesses representing the equestrian lifestyle.”

Equestrian Culture’s creative director Leah Anderson and I built this tagline during a series of conversations and brainstorming sessions for our . If we had to tell someone about Equestrian Culture in the length of one tweet, what would we say? How would we sum up something that so deeply reflects our interests and our identities in 140 characters or less?

Equestrian Culture Fall 2013

While we are both very happy with the tagline we created, it doesn’t tell Equestrian Culture’s readers who we are. What qualifies us to write and curate an equestrian magazine? Why should equestrians and horse lovers subscribe to Equestrian Culture? What makes Equestrian Culture and it’s team unique?

Our Mission:

Many equestrian lifestyle publications exclusively showcase a dream lifestyle. Equestrian Culture celebrates the craftsmanship that goes into couture and luxury pieces, but we also dig deeper to discover start up businesses with beautiful, unique product offerings. Equestrian Culture’s “Small Business Spotlight” elevates the everyday. We find what is just starting to bloom—something incredible that is beginning to rise out of hard work, talent and intense dedication—and we give it a platform. We bring spreads upon spreads of amazingly gorgeous equine artwork and photography to the masses. The horse’s innate beauty and power is, after all, what has always drawn us to them.

Equestrian Culture Magazine Photography

Spread from our Fall Issue’s Featured Photographer article about Bianca McCarthy

We share equestrian influenced style that is not only fashionable but is also something that we would wear and ride in. Alongside photographs of the season’s latest collections that illuminate the pages of Equestrian Culture are the stories behind those brands–directly from the founders.

Equestrian Culture Magazine The Horse Behind the Brand

Spread from our Fall Issue’s “The Horse Behind the Brand” article featuring an interview with Sara Griot of O’Shaughnessey

The DIY project included in each issue of Equestrian Culture further adds to our distinctiveness. I haven’t seen many other equestrian lifestyle magazines that include these beautiful craft ideas. Not only do we believe in helping the businesses featured in Equestrian Culture, but we also think that it is so important to give back to our readers. Creating and sharing these unique equine themed gift ideas with our readers is one more way that we strive to give back.

Equestrian Culture Fall Issue DIY Project

Spread from our Fall Issue’s DIY project

What Equestrian Culture means to me:

My Roots:

Every school has “the horse girl”. If you are reading this, you were most likely one of them. I certainly was. My bike was a horse. The swings on my swing set were horses. When driving in the car with my parents, I would pretend that the shadows we drove over on the road were jumps. The living room was the perfect place to practice my “dressage moves” and I believe that I cantered more than I ran. I grew up playing with and collecting Breyers and attending 4-H meetings.

Gemini & I

Gemini and I when I was 7 and Gemini was 13.

I was very lucky. My parents purchased my first horse when I was only five years old. Gemini was an 11 year old 15.3hh Quarter Horse/Arabian cross gelding. He was my childhood. Together, we learned and grew a lot over the course of the 17 long years that he was a part of my life. He was my 4-H project horse, we took dressage and jumping lessons, went on countless trail rides, travelled to overnight horse camps together and even competed in our first two-phase when Gemini was 20 years old!

Gemini & I

Left: Gemini and I dressed up for a costume class at a 4-H fun show. Right: Some of my childhood horse drawings.

Our horses lived at home. I spent a lot of time just watching Gemini and my parents’ Quarter Horse Jessie as they dozed in the pasture. All of those careful observations lead to MANY horse drawings. I drew horses constantly. I still do actually.

My Interests and Passions Transformed into Articles:

All of those horse drawings eventually turned me into an accomplished artist. The year I graduated from high school I founded my first business, Designs by Dannie, where I sold my equine artwork and apparel. In college I double majored in Studio Art and Art Education and minored in Art History. My art background and education is the reason why Equestrian Culture features artwork and photography so much more heavily than other equestrian publications.

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Spread from our Fall Issue’s Artist Interview with Claire Bentley Smith

I love to discover, collect and write about art. While in college, I really enjoyed writing art history research papers. One of those research papers won a travel grant that paid for my first trip to London and Paris.

Missing the opportunity to study and write about art and culture after graduating from college, I created Cavalcade. Editing and curating the content here on the blog has resulted in so many wonderful relationships with small business owners from all over the world. These entrepreneurs have inspired me. Behind each of their businesses are rich stories about how they built their own path in life.

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Spread from our Fall Issue’s “Small Business Spotlight” featuring Seven Barks

These relationships guided my decision to include two business centric articles in each issue of Equestrian Culture. “The Horse Behind the Brand” digs deep into the childhood connection many of these founders of equestrian businesses—both big and small—have with horses. There is always a special horse that influenced the formation of their independent and entrepreneurial identity. The “Small Business Spotlight” interview—another regular feature—particularly resonates with me as a fellow small business owner. I understand how hard it can be to get your business’s name out there. I love that Equestrian Culture has the ability to help these start-ups!

Gemini & I

Gemini and I at a state 4-H Horse Show

Horses are interwoven into many facets of my life. They are my hobby, my muse and the reason for my occupation. The content that fills the pages of each issue of Equestrian Culture is a direct reflection of my identity. Equestrian Culture is a project that I feel very passionately about.

What Equestrian Culture means to Leah Anderson, our Creative Director:

Who I am:

I was born with horses in my blood and a pencil in my hand! As a child I was constantly drawing horses and going through the Dover catalog highlighting every product that I would need for the barn I was going to have when I grew up. During recess, my horse friends and I would ‘gallop’ around the playground, leaping over anything and everything that could be ‘jumped’. I spent my summers riding bareback on a bay Arabian named Gazadi, and my school days drawing horses in the margins of my notebooks.

Leah & Gazadi

Left: Leah with one of her horse drawings. Right: Leah & Gazadi

Things didn’t change much as I got older. My mom saved up money and when I was 13 I got my first horse. I still have the ad that I ripped out of the Little Nickel Classifieds. That mare became my best friend, my everything—carrying me to pony club ratings and on countless adventures. I went to college & received a BFA in Graphic Design. For my senior project I wrote, photographed & designed a book about rescue horses titled “Forgotten”. From that point forward, I knew that combining my love of horses & my passion for design was my ultimate career path.

Leah riding

Leah riding.

In 2011 I followed my heart after the love of my life, and packed up everything (including my horse) and moved across the country to a rural part of Georgia. With no design studio that could possibly hire me within 100 miles, I decided to found my own design business: Dapplebay, Inc. Shortly after that, I launched Dapplebay Clothing Co. in an effort to meet potential clients and expand my network. I can happily say I have achieved my goal to combine my two passions into a successful, fulfilling career.

Leah & Lady

Leah & Lady

How I got involved with Equestrian Culture:

I have known Danielle through her blog, where she has featured my Dapplebay t-shirts. When she approached me for some help finalizing the Equestrian Culture logo, I was floored. A beautiful magazine, about horses, art and small business, curated with incredible taste? Equestrian Culture had my name written all over it—I had to be a part of this magazine. While I love designing logos, websites and t-shirts, my true calling has always been publication design. Something about choosing typefaces, the careful balance of making & breaking the grid, and painstakingly adjusting & readjusting the rag of a paragraph…I could design a magazine for the rest of my life! I hope that the successful funding of this Kickstarter campaign allows me that opportunity.

Leah jenna EC

Left: Leah wearing a Dapplebay shirt. Right: Leah & her OTTB Pie

What Equestrian Culture means to me:

Equestrian Culture means the life lived loving horses. To love a horse is no small passion, and those of us that have shared this notion are inextricably linked. Equestrian Culture Magazine was created to share and celebrate this bond through art, storytelling & community. There is a horse that inspired all of us…that horse is the reason Equestrian Culture Magazine was founded.

What I will bring to Equestrian Culture:

Visually, EC is not just a publication filled with beautiful photographs, art, and wonderful stories- it is carefully designed in a way that sets it apart from other equine publications. My experience & passion for excellent design is evident on every page: the thoughtful layout, use of white space, and careful typography are unique to Equestrian Culture Magazine. In regard to the content of the magazine, EC is curated with an educated eye. Design is a big part of who I am, and design thinking goes into every decision & purchase that I make. I have been greatly influenced by great brands throughout my life with horses, and those memories have shaped my preferences and horse keeping practices over time. Equestrian Culture Magazine tells the stories of these brands we love & discovers the highest quality, best valued, most beautiful products for YOUR life with horses.

Thank you all so much for supporting our new endeavor!

You can visit Equestrian Culture’s Kickstarter campaign here:
If you haven’t read our Fall Issue yet, you can find it here:

Historic Photos: People and Their Horses

It has been several months since I last featured a collection of historic photographs. I have always loved to really study these early equine images from over a century ago; analyzing the tack, riding habits, horses’ confirmation, and even how their hooves were trimmed/shod (my dad is a farrier, I can’t help it!). It is always a treat to find “new” old photos! All of the photos featured below date from between 1867 and 1886. Enjoy!

Belle Starr Fort Smith Arkansas 1886

“Belle Starr and her Horse, Fort Smith, Arkansas”, Roeder Bros., 1886


Monsieur Adam Salomon by Louis Jean Delton
“Monsieur Adam Salomon dans use victoria grand-duc”, Louis-Jean Delton, 1867


Marian Hooper Adams on horseback at Beverly Farms
Marian Hooper Adams on Horseback at Beverly Farms”, unidentified photographer, 1869


Brooks Adams with horse and dog
“Brooks Adams with Horse and Dog”, Marian Hooper Adams, 1883


Toulouse Rue d Astorg Charlotte de Gomiécourt à cheval 1869 51Fi94 Fonds Trutat
“Toulouse. Rue d’Astorg. Charlotte de Gomiécourt à cheval”, Eugène Trutat, 1869

Equestrian Culture Magazine’s Kickstarter Campaign is Live!

Let’s take Equestrian Culture to print!

Many of you who follow Cavalcade’s social media pages have already heard a little bit about Equestrian Culture’s (our sister magazine) plans to launch a Kickstarter campaign and have seen some of the awesome rewards that will be offered during the campaign. Well, that day has come! Equestrian Culture’s campaign is live on Kickstarter right now!

Kickstarter

Why is Equestrian Culture on Kickstarter?

Since publishing our first issue in June, Equestrian Culture’s readership has grown incredibly quickly. We want the magazine to continue to grow and evolve and feel that now is the time to transition Equestrian Culture from an online magazine to a print and online publication. We are running the Kickstarter campaign with the goal of raising enough funds to cover the cost of printing our next issue.

Learn more about Equestrian Culture:

A vital part of any Kickstarter campaign is the video. Watch our video to learn more about the types of articles featured in Equestrian Culture, the team behind the magazine and the awesome rewards that are available to both businesses and individuals who make donations to the campaign:

How You Can Help:

We have been planning this campaign for months, and it would mean the world to us if you’d spread the word by simply clicking the Facebook and Twitter buttons on the page in this link: ! Just doing that will make a HUGE difference.

Thank you all so much!

Equestrian Culture:
Kickstarter Campaign: Equestrian Culture Magazine: Take us to Print!
Website: equestrianculture.com
Facebook Page:
Twitter:

Etsy Equestrian Chic Vol. 27: Jumpers

Continuing on my discipline specific themes, this week’s Etsy Equestrian Chic collection is all about jumping. I was able to find a nice mix of vintage and handmade pieces to suit a variety of tastes. I love the antique jumping award plaque originally awarded at a Parisian horse show over one hundred years ago in 1909!

Etsy Equestrian Chic Vol. 27

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Equestrian Culture’s Fall Issue is Here!

Fall Issue is now available to read on Issuu. Once again, this issue is filled with interviews with inspiring equestrian entrepreneurs and small businesses, beautiful equine artwork and photography, an awesome DIY project and chic collections of equestrian inspired fashion, accessories and decor. Be sure to read the Editor’s Letter to learn about all of the exciting changes happening at Equestrian Culture!

Equestrian Culture Fall Issue

Now that the Fall Issue has been published, I will be back to posting here regularly again. Last week’s posts took a backseat to preparing the magazine, but I think that the wonderful content we curated for this issue will more than make up for it!

The Pony Co. Giveaway Winner Announced!

Good morning all! I just selected the winner of giveaway via random.org. First, thank you to all of you who entered the giveaway and a huge thank you to The Pony Co. for offering this wonderful giveaway item to Cavalcade readers!

The Pony Co. Giveaway

Congratulations comment #1: Rachel Masen!

Please email me at [email protected]. Thank you for reading Cavalcade!

Equine Photography: Julie Refer

Another testament to how many wonderful equine photographers can be found on Etsy! Yesterday, while searching for items to feature in next week’s Etsy Equestrian Chic collection, I came across ‘s beautiful black and white photos. These photos possess a wonderful sense of stillness, calm and grace that instantly drew me in when I spotted one of them amongst the dozens of item thumbnails on Etsy’s search page.

Julie Refer Equine Photography

, $39.00


My muses are my four mares, who daily show me their beauty, expression and personality. Through the lens I strive to capture the spirit, beauty and emotion of the horse, and my hope is that you will see them as I do. –

Julie Refer Equine Photography

, $29.00


Julie Refer Equine Photography
, $57.00


Julie Refer Equine Photography
, $29.00


Julie Refer Equine Photography
, $29.00


Julie Refer Equine Photography
, $29.00

You can also find Julie Refer’s work here:
Website:
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