Posted on October 27, 2016
More doors from the picturesque village of Gargilesse this week. If there is a common thread to this batch, it’s that all these doors, rather than being pictured in isolation, as it were, are shown in the context of the houses to which they belong.
I’m intrigued as to why the plate on the right hand gatepost of this house reads “Old Fashion Jazz Band”:

I’m also intrigued as to the significance of the cut-out letter ‘M’ in this upper-story door. It can’t be the obvious, because that would be ‘H’ for hommes.

This building used to be a pottery, which probably explains the substantial artefact in front of the door:

Not exactly disabled access, this one:

or this:

Thursday Doors 27 October 2016
Category: Doors Tagged: Doors, Gargilesse, Thursday Doors
Posted on October 20, 2016
Not far from Nohant (assuming that your coach driver doesn’t get lost, like ours did – and not for the first time that day) is the picturesque village of Gargilesse, where George Sand had a smaller house, which was subsequently home to her daughter and husband for many years.
As well as a medieval church – of which this is the side door – with a remarkably frescoed crypt, the village also has a fair few, more interesting, doors.

There are doors in there somewhere, trust me:

These are rather easier to see. The first one is my favourite of this batch:



More from Gargilesse next week.
Thursday Doors 20 October 2016
Category: Doors Tagged: Church, Doors, France, Gargilesse, Thursday Doors
Posted on October 13, 2016
After last week’s post on the doors to be found at the house of George Sand, we now turn to some of the doors in the village of Nohant, in whose centre that mansion is to be found. In putting together this post, it struck me that the further away you find yourself from the big house the tattier the doors become.
Thus, right opposite the gates of the house is the village church, with this neat little side door:

And on the other side of the church is this well-kept front door:

The sign over the door is interesting, not to say intriguing when you look at it in close-up:

The date is 1888, ‘siège sociale‘ means headquarters and Berry is what the region was called before the country was organised into départements. The article on the right looks suspiciously like a set of bagpipes and the one on the left could be some kind of accordion, but it’s the word ‘gâs’ that’s got me stumped. It’s obviously plural (because it goes with ‘les‘), but I can’t find ‘gâ‘ in any dictionary, although ‘gas‘ (singular) is translated as ‘lad’ or ‘guy’. Perhaps it’s a patois word.
On the opposite side of what, for want of a better expression, you could call the village green, is this house which is clearly in good decorative order, as an estate agent might put it:

After that, though, things start to get a bit rough around the edges, as in this rusty gate:

And by the time we reach the edge of the village, things are much more typical of what you would expect to find in rural France:

Thursday Doors 13 October 2016
Posted on October 6, 2016
George Sand was a noted 19th century French writer, known also for the glittering company (Chopin, Flaubert to name but two) she entertained at her house in the hamlet of Nohant, in the Indre département of central France. You can read more about her here.
Today her impressive residence is open to the public and a very popular destination for tourists and coach parties, which is how I found myself there recently. It’s got some nice doors too.
This is the gated entrance to the house; note the bricked up doors on either side:

The inevitable Gift Shop is housed in what looks like a former stable block. Not only are these doors a lovely colour but it’s unusual to see their inner side:

And here are a few more:



There is a formal garden to the side of the house. Rather incongruously, this ‘box’ of doors is plonked in the middle of the lawn. I suppose it must be art.

Thursday Doors 6 October 2016
Category: Doors Tagged: Doors, George Sand, Nohant, Thursday Doors
Posted on September 29, 2016
On a coach outing last weekend, we stopped for lunch in a town in central France called La Chatre. I’m not really sure why, since it wasn’t anywhere near any of the places we were actually visiting either before or after lunch.
Be that as it may, perhaps it was the dull, overcast conditions, but it didn’t strike me as a particularly cheerful or attractive place to be, or to spend much time in. There was a sign pointing towards a ‘medieval centre’ – although we never got anywhere near it – so perhaps I’m doing it a disservice.
I think these doors rather catch the mood of the place:

Even these atrractive arched doorways are somewhat blighted by the accretions of grime at the top of the wall:

This grand house has a nice enough, if shabby, front door, but oh my dear, the shutters:

…and as for the tradesmens’ entrance:

Maintaining the theme of grubbiness:

But, to try and finish on an upbeat note, I liked these doors on an obviously recently refurbished building:

Fortunately, the afternoon was spent in rather more cheerful and picturesque locations, with doors to be shared here over the next few weeks.
Thursday Doors 29 September 2016
Category: Doors Tagged: Doors, La Chatre, Thursday Doors
Posted on September 27, 2016
This door – of a church on the island of Burano, in the Venetian lagoon – could really do with a fresh coat of paint.

Category: Texture Tagged: Burano, Church, Doors, Paint, TuesdaysofTexture, Venice, Weathering
Posted on September 22, 2016
More from St-Germain-de-Confolens this week. I should explain that the village’s main (effectively only) street runs more or less north to south alongside the Charente river. In practical terms that means that on sunny afternoons the shadows can be quite harsh. However, I think the doors are still worth looking at.


This door’s obviously still in use:

Unlike this one, opposite, of a closed-down restaurant…

…which echoes the colours of the building that houses the Post Office. The modern door doesn’t have a lot to say for itself, but I like the strong geometric shape of the security grilles:

Finally, my favourite of this week’s bunch – gloriously decrepit, with the finishing touch of a rose growing next to it:

Thursday Doors 22 September 2016
Category: Doors Tagged: Charente, Doors, France, Shadows, St-Germain-de-Confolens, sunshine, Thursday Doors
Posted on September 15, 2016
St-Germain-de-Confolens is yet another pretty little village that’s only a twenty minute drive from here at Tranquility Base (we’re surrounded by them, but who’s complaining?), although it’s in a different département – Charente as opposed to Haute-Vienne.
Effectively, it’s just one street that runs parallel to the Charente river. However, the doors are interesting and there are enough of them to need two instalments to dispay here.
You need to be careful stepping out of this one:

These two are actually next to each other in real life, as it were:
In this one, I like that the gateway echoes the shape of the door behind it:

The door’s okay in this one, but I was particularly drawn to the tatty shutter on the window at top left:

And finally for this week, you can’t help wondering if there’s a secret garden behind this little door:

Thursday Doors 15 September 2106
Category: Doors Tagged: Charente, Doors, France, St-Germain-de-Confolens, Thursday Doors
Posted on September 8, 2016
This, I promise, is the final instalment of the myriad interesting doors of Thiers, this time featuring the even numbers. The first is notable for its very elaborate stone surround:

I’ve put these next two side by side as they are like mirror images:
And these two because of their similar shapes. Note the ironwork above the door on the left:
Finally, judging by the debris in front of this door, something of a renovation project is going on behind it.

Next week we’re off somewhere closer to home that, on a recent visit, proved to be just as fascinating in the door department.
Thursday Doors 8 September 2016
Category: Doors Tagged: Doors, Even numbers, Thiers, Thursday Doors
Posted on September 1, 2016
The second instalment of the doors of Thiers features those with odd numbers.
The narrow streets of the medieval centre are quite steep in parts, as you can see here:

…and here (not so old, but just as tatty):

Over time, street level has risen, leaving some doors with what could be desxribed as restricted access:


I couldn’t not include this door with the adjacent mural:

And on a hot day, this seemed like a good idea:

Thursday Doors 1 September 2016