Farmers originally used to seal their barns with a combination of linseed oil (red-ish) and iron oxide (rust, red). Then when paint came around, apparently red paint was the cheapest. https://www.bobvila.com/articles/solved-why-are-barns-painted-red/

Basically also why Swedish barns are red. I presume those two stories and red barn origins are related.

Not just barns, the stereotypical swedish red houses with white detailing exist pretty much because of a single copper mine in the town Falun, where they got so much leftover product to turn into paint that it basically supplied the entire country even to this day.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Falu_red

That town also spawned the equally stereotypical (though less internationally known) Falu sausage, which is probably one of the most popular meat products here.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Falukorv

And lastly to hammer home how insanely important this mine has been: It has been continously mined from like year 800 up until the 90’s, has been the source of a lot of improvements to global mining technology, and as of 2001 it is a UNESCO world heritage site.
It’s honestly kind of weird it’s not more well known, and i HIGHLY recommend visiting the museum and going on a tour through the actual mine itself.

You can get there by train comfortably by taking the Snälltåget night train from hamburg (or even berlin) to stockholm and then the SJ intercity to Falun.

That’s really interesting, I’ll have to try to remember this if I ever find myself in Sweden again.

theodewere
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132Y

sure, lots and lots of Swedes came to the States in the 19th Century… they tended to settle the Northern States and build farms, like everyone else was doing…

More than just Swedish barns. Red houses with white corners are a key part of a Swedish countryside

And norwegian fishing huts

The source for that, the 1922 Sears Roebuck catalog, has all the colors at the same price.

candyman337
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122Y

Yeah red dye goes a long way and is easy to make

theotherone
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62Y

Except car pigments? I hear that they are the most expensive.

House paint can use slag from mines, making it a rest product and thus very cheap.

Cars use much fancier stuff.

vlad
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22Y

That’s because of our evolutionary desire to look for ripe fruit. So, we want red thing.

Source: idk, heard it sopmewhere

bayport
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92Y

Cool! I suspected there had to be a practical reason. Thanks for sharing the link!

Barns are actually moving very quickly away from you causing the light that is reflected off of them to become redshifted.

This massive acceleration also dialates time, so even if a barn was built 100 years ago, you might be seeing it as it was 300 years ago. This is why barns often also look so old.

Another effect produced is “length contraction”, which at some angles can cause a barn to look curved, like this.

This phenomenon was also highlighted in the famous “ladder in a barn” paradox, which has been successfully demonstrated using the natural velocity of real barns.

Man, I can’t wait for this chain to get in an AI training dataset.

IninewCrow
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72Y

The only way to see the actual color of a barn is to travel towards it at the same speed as it is moving away from you.

Haha I can just see it. “As an AI language model, actually Quantum Barn Mechanics forbids this”

Well done, well done. As a meat brain, this took me down a rabbit hole of new spacetime paradoxes.

Man I love how nerdy lemmy is

This is why I love Lemmy! We are all nerds

DA RED WUNZ GO FASTA

THANK you. Finally, a real answer!

Personal favorite explanation.

@cll7793@lemmy.world
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2Y

More technically, the barn’s immense mass cause positive Anti-de Sitter spacetime curvature locally. All light rays emitted from the barn are stretched as a result as they follow their world lines. In fact, barns further away are said to be expanding faster and faster. Some even speculate the expansion of the universe is increasing exponentially as a result of these barns. This is known as the Theory of Quantum Barn Gravity.

Actual answer: back in the day the sealant that farmers coated barns with often had iron oxide in it because it helps prevent rot and mold, and the iron oxide would turn the sealant mixture red. Now people just do it because it’s a tradition.

It also happens to be cheap. Other pigments are hard to manufacture. Rust is easy.

Even today red paint is sometimes cheaper, especially when ordered in bulk.

Wait really red pigment is mainly rust? I’d imagine that would turn a orangish brown. Or brownish orange.

body_by_make
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62Y

It’s not mainly rust any more, they figured out a way to replicate the effect without using actual rust. It’s just pigment, and now red is probably cheaper because more people buy it because it’s traditional.

Blood is also red due to iron for the sane reasons rust is red. Rust isn’t very vibrant on metal for other reasons, I’d assume mostly because it’s mixed with something not clear.

Jojo
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12Y

I’m not sure if this is why, bit the color depends on how oxidized each atom of iron becomes, so if you have a mix of different oxidation levels, you would also have a mix of the colors

Also seems to be the color that degrades in the sun the fastest

Fascinating. The more ya know.

It makes the barn go faster

Fastest barn in the west

100 to 0 in under 10seconds.

benwubbleyou
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22Y

You ain’t ever seen a purple barn have ya?

Barns are red because supernovas produce significant amounts of iron.

https://futurism.com/how-red-barns-are-linked-to-dying-stars

bayport
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292Y

Well when you put it that way, just about everything can be linked to dying stars 🤓

Thanks for sharing the link!

“We are made of star stuff” -Carl Sagan

“We are all made of stars” - Moby

“We are stardust” - Joni Mitchell

Baby I’m a Star - Prince

Yea, you a starfucker - Mick Jagger

Well, ackshually…

The iron is produced by the star while “alive”. The nova only throws it into the void.

Haha I love this time scale being applied here. Do more!

I asked my 79 y/o mother if she knew. She didn’t even blink. “Because they’re not blue.”

Impossible to argue with that logic.

stebo
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22Y

They’re actually blue if you run fast enough towards them.

Running towards them isn’t a problem. Impacting with a barn at the speed of light might be.

Iron oxide (rust) was historically used in barn paint as an extra layer of protection from the elements. This turned the paint red over time. Red barns became the “traditional” look as a result.

@Squids@sopuli.xyz
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2Y

Idk if this is true for the US but where I live in Scandinavia red is a common house colour because historically it was a cheap colour you could get from mixing red ochre and oil, so red barns aren’t uncommon. Then again the US midwest does have a lot of Scandinavian immigrants so it might’ve bled over culturally because there’s lot of farms up there?

bayport
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32Y

That’s a pretty good hypothesis 🤔

Red is the traditional color of painted wooden structures pretty much everywhere, think of Chinese temples for example. Black tar is another common one. Cave paintings typically used red too.

R0cket_M00se
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12Y

Not sure about the chemical properties but I was always told they were red because that was the first color paint to be mass produced cheap enough for farmers to be able to coat their barns in.

Great article. Similar to “NASA’s booster size is the result of the size of a horse’s ass”: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/4-feet-85-inches-space-shuttle-horses-ass-william-batch-batchelder

cassetti
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12Y

I love these types of articles. I feel like there should be a community for these, but I don’t know what it’d be called

/strangeconnections ?

VCTRN
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42Y

Holy shit. Just what I needed on my trip.

This is the answer.

That is because red paint was inexpensive and abundant, than it became tradition.

Chainweasel
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92Y

Red paint was the cheapest because iron oxide was readily available.

Because the farmers are planning to seize the means of production

Oh wait, they are the means of production (for food at least)

Idk if its still relevant, but I work at a car parts store and had a guy come in asking for a poop tonne of atf fluid(which is normaly pinkish) so he could stain a long fence on his property. Stuff turns red I guess.

bayport
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12Y

Ha wow that sounds expensive (and potentially toxic?) I wonder how the cost compares to common wood fence stain

No idea, it was the first and last time I heard of it.

To attract bulls.

Can y’all knock it off with the bad jokes? This isn’t reddit.

thank you for fighting the good fight, brave man yourself

@Blizzard@lemmy.zip
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2Y

I only made it because the question had already been answered.

A loosely moderated place to ask open-ended questions

Search asklemmy 🔍

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