Thursday doors – 13 June 2024 – Street art doors

Doors 268 – Street art and graffiti doors of Bristol (and Weston-super-Mare)

I have been away from Bristol a bit this week, and not had any time to prepare my final part of Cheltenham doors, which I will share in my next Thursday doors post. When this happens, I tend to recycle some existing photographs that I have taken for my graffiti and street art blog posts. gather them together and post them as a doors collection. It is a pragmatic solution to a diminishing time resource window (any more corporate speak welcome at this point).

These doors (and I use the term as loosely as possible) were originally posted in March, April and May 2023, but may have been photographed before that. I hope you enjoy them. Normal service should resume next time.

Alex Lucas, Montpelier, Bristol, February 2023
Alex Lucas, Montpelier, Bristol, February 2023
Conrico, Boswell Street, Bristol, April 2023
Conrico, Boswell Street, Bristol, April 2023
Zase, Cottrell Road, Bristol, April 2023
Zase, Cottrell Road, Bristol, April 2023

I cheated a little with this one, but there is a door behind the wall.

Maybe, Cumberland Basin, Bristol, May 2023
Maybe, Cumberland Basin, Bristol, May 2023

Is a hatch a door?

Maybe, Cumberland Basin, Bristol, May 2023
Maybe, Cumberland Basin, Bristol, May 2023
Aspire, Weston wallz, Weston-super-Mare, May 2023
Aspire, Weston wallz, Weston-super-Mare, May 2023

Do car doors count?

That’s it for this week.

If you have made it this far, you probably like doors, and you really ought to take a look at the No Facilities blog by Dan Anton who has taken over the hosting of Thursday Doors from Norm 2.0 blog. Links to more doorscursions can be found in the comments section of Dan Anton’s Thursday Doors post.

by Scooj

Thursday doors – 6 June 2024 – Doors from Cheltenham

Doors 267 – Doors from Cheltenham, July 2023 (Part II)

I don’t have a great deal to say about the selection of doors this week, except that I took the photographs during a visit to last year’s Cheltenham Paint Festival, and of course, whenever I visit a town or city, for whatever reason, you will find me collecting doors or taking doorscursions. On that subject, I am off to York again next week and I am hoping to find some time to wander around York Minster and the surrounding area… watch this space (in about a year – my archive of doors is swelling).

There is no theme to these doors, but I hope you enjoy the collection nonetheless:

Recessed wooden door with a fine stone archway, Cheltenham, July 2023
Recessed wooden door with a fine stone archway, Cheltenham, July 2023

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Recessed door with a fine stone archway and windows, Cheltenham, July 2023
Recessed door with a fine stone archway and windows, Cheltenham, July 2023

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Grey, tatty door, Cheltenham, July 2023
Grey, tatty door, Cheltenham, July 2023

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Ordinary black door with typically 'Cheltenham' awning, Cheltenham, July 2023
Ordinary black door with typically ‘Cheltenham’ awning, Cheltenham, July 2023

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Do it yourself door decorations, Cheltenham, July 2023
Do it yourself door decorations, Cheltenham, July 2023

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Splendid white door and surround plus untintional doorfie, Cheltenham, July 2023
Splendid white door and surround plus unintentional doorfie, Cheltenham, July 2023

One more week of Cheltenham doors to come, and then possibly a return to Italy. Have a great weekend.

If you have made it this far, you probably like doors, and you really ought to take a look at the No Facilities blog by Dan Anton who has taken over the hosting of Thursday Doors from Norm 2.0 blog. Links to more doorscursions can be found in the comments section of Dan Anton’s Thursday Doors post.

by Scooj

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Thursday doors – 30 May 2024 – Doors from Cheltenham

Doors 266 – Doors from Cheltenham, July 2023 (Part I)

Last July, I made my annual pilgrimage to Cheltenham for the Cheltenham Paint Festival, which thanks to the tireless efforts of the organiser Andy Davies (Dice 67) is going from strength to strength. Of course, I took the opportunity (not for the first time) to photograph some doors while I was there. Cheltenham is a funny place in that it has some expensive and exclusive properties cheek by jowl with what we call these days ‘affordable housing’ (none of which is particularly affordable, but that discussion is for another day). The result is an eclectic mix of doors and periods – here is a taster for my first of three collections from last year’s visit:

Yellow door with an oval window, Cheltenham, July 2023
Yellow door with an oval window, Cheltenham, July 2023
Door with a flat-roofed awning, Cheltenham, July 2023
Door with a flat-roofed awning, Cheltenham, July 2023
Former Beatrice von Tresckow design shop font, Cheltenham, July 2023
Former Beatrice von Tresckow design shop font, Cheltenham, July 2023
Door to Former Beatrice von Tresckow design shop font, Cheltenham, July 2023
Door to Former Beatrice von Tresckow design shop font, Cheltenham, July 2023
Blue door, Ionic columns and an ornate veranda, Cheltenham, July 2023
Blue door, Ionic columns and an ornate veranda, Cheltenham, July 2023
Black door and ornate veranda, Cheltenham, July 2023
Black door and ornate veranda, Cheltenham, July 2023
Black door and steps, Cheltenham, July 2023
Black door and steps, Cheltenham, July 2023
Double doors with one sealed up, Cheltenham, July 2023
Double doors with one sealed up, Cheltenham, July 2023

I recall that I posted this last door once before in September 2019, although it looked quite different then. It is interesting how a lick of paint can completely transform the look of a building, and the impression it gives.

Pity about the scaffolding! Cheltenham, September 2019
Pity about the scaffolding! Cheltenham, September 2019

That just about wraps it up for this week, and I hope it serves as a taster for the next two Thursday Doors I’ll be posting. May I wish you a pleasant weekend.

If you have made it this far, you probably like doors, and you really ought to take a look at the No Facilities blog by Dan Anton who has taken over the hosting of Thursday Doors from Norm 2.0 blog. Links to more doorscursions can be found in the comments section of Dan Anton’s Thursday Doors post.

by Scooj

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Thursday doors – 23 May 2024 – Doors from Highgate, London

Doors 265 – Doors from Highgate, London, November 2023 (Part V)

Forgive me if I appear a little distracted this morning, but I am still processing yesterday’s announcement by Rishi Sunak our Prime Minister, that we will be having a general election on 4 July (a special day on both sides of the pond), which is a little earlier than most were expecting. I’ll say no more about it, as Thursday Doors is a refuge from such matters, and instead focus on the final set of doors from a trip to Highgate in North London in November 2023, where I had lived for the majority of my teenage years.

I have also included a picture of the urinals in the public gents loo in Pond Square, simply because in spite of their function, they are elegant – they don’t make them like that any more (the old man in me says).

Most of these doors are from the Pond Square area, which is at the heart of Highgate ‘village’. When I was growing up, it was a place where teenagers would congregate to chat and make plans for which pubs they would try to get served in. It was also the focal point for the Pond Square Punks – it was the punk era, after all. I hope you enjoy the doors.

Blue doors of the Highgate URC Church, Highgate, London, November 2023
Blue doors of the Highgate URC Church, Highgate, London, November 2023

Pond Square public convenience and green door, Highgate, London, November 2023
Pond Square public convenience and green door, Highgate, London, November 2023

Black and white doors with flat-roofed awnings, Highgate, London, November 2023
Black and white doors with flat-roofed awnings, Highgate, London, November 2023

Yellow door with flat-roofed awning, Highgate, London, November 2023
Yellow door with flat-roofed awning, Highgate, London, November 2023

Cream and blue doors with flat-roofed awnings, Highgate, London, November 2023
Cream and blue doors with flat-roofed awnings, Highgate, London, November 2023

Had there once been a wider door to Burlington Court? Highgate, London, November 2023
Had there once been a wider door to Burlington Court? Highgate, London, November 2023

Unpainted door and an autumn feel, Highgate, London, November 2023
Unpainted door and an autumn feel, Highgate, London, November 2023

So that rounds things off nicely for this trip down memory lane, which I have really enjoyed sharing on Thursday doors. I have a great many folders of doors waiting in the wings but will keep my plans for next time as a surprise (mainly because I haven’t decided yet).

Have a great weekend, and if you live in the UK, batten down the hatches for six weeks of relentless electioneering.

If you have made it this far, you probably like doors, and you really ought to take a look at the No Facilities blog by Dan Anton who has taken over the hosting of Thursday Doors from Norm 2.0 blog. Links to more doorscursions can be found in the comments section of Dan Anton’s Thursday Doors post.

by Scooj

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Thursday doors – 16 May 2024 – Doors from Highgate, London

Doors 264 – Doors from Highgate, London, November 2023 (Part IV)

This week I am incredibly pressed for time, so this will be a very short entry. My late afternoon doorscursion back in November 2023 through my old ‘manor’, Highgate village, continues in this penultimate collection from North London.

I really wanted to talk about all the pubs in Highgate, because when I was a teenager, all the talk was that Highgate had more pubs on the main street than anywhere else in the country. I have no idea if this was true, but the following is a list of them (all within a few hundred yards), starting halfway down Highgate Hill:

  • Brendan the Navigator, used to be called The Old Crown Inn – it has obviously gone up-market.
  • The Duke’s Head
  • The Angel
  • The Prince of Wales
  • The Crown
  • The Gatehouse (featured below)
  • The Flask (featured below)
  • The Red Lion and Sun
  • The Wrestlers
  • The Bull

I hope you enjoy this week’s selection:

The Gatehouse entrance door and lamp, Highgate , London, November 2023
The Gatehouse entrance door and lamp, Highgate , London, November 2023

The Flask entrance (please use other door), Highgate , London, November 2023
The Flask entrance (please use other door), Highgate , London, November 2023

Blue door with fine columns and portico, Highgate, London, November 2023
Blue door with fine columns and portico, Highgate, London, November 2023

Triple panelled black door, Highgate, London, November 2023
Triple panelled black door, Highgate, London, November 2023

Chesterfield door and fine scalloped awning, Highgate, London, November 2023
Chesterfield door and fine scalloped awning, Highgate, London, November 2023

The Old Hall gate and door, Highgate , London, November 2023
The Old Hall gate and door, Highgate, London, November 2023

If you have made it this far, you probably like doors, and you really ought to take a look at the No Facilities blog by Dan Anton who has taken over the hosting of Thursday Doors from Norm 2.0 blog. Links to more doorscursions can be found in the comments section of Dan Anton’s Thursday Doors post.

by Scooj

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Thursday doors – 9 May 2024 – Doors from Highgate, London

Doors 264 – Doors from Highgate, London, November 2023 (Part III)

I went to a private (public) school in London, Highgate School, which was regarded in those days as a ‘second division’ public school for boys. In fairness, it has changed immeasurably since I was there. Then, it was a hotbed of white male privilege, and an anachronistic hangover from our colonialist days as a nation.

I received a very good education there and made a select few lifelong friends, but I frequently reflect on my time with some regret, that I was, and by inference am, a product of a system that has resulted in so many things that are bad about our country today. Misogyny, arrogance, inflated confidence, entitlement, racism, hierarchy and many other aspects of a social and financial elitism were nurtured in the public school environments of the 1970s.

We see in the current (and previous) Conservative Government the outcome of a dysfunctional and utterly unfair and unbalanced educational (and class) system. So many of our decision makers have enormous ‘blind spots’ where their position and status have been forged by their privileged experiences and selfish desires, without even a cursory glance at the wider society they serve.

Make no mistake, the private educational system in our country perpetuates the class and social divides and in my view should be abolished. A good education and educational assets should be the right of every child in the country, without exception, irrespective of background or ability to pay. Raise the bar for everyone, and if we have to pay more taxes to get it, then so be it. Those paying £30,000 per year (or term in some places) would be able to divert their savings into the public purse and feel the warm glow of helping the nation rather than themselves.

It is clear from the last 14 years, that our Eton-educated leaders have absolutely ruined our country, not because of the quality of their education, but because of their prejudices and ideology nurtured on the playing fields of British public schools.

OK, so I have got that off my chest. There are some parts of my school days that I do look upon fondly. My friends, some of the teachers (the Zoological Society – see last week’s post), the access to sport and the buildings were positive aspects, and through the years I had something of a love/hate relationship with the school. I worked hard, was never particularly academic, and was generally well-behaved. My reward eventually was to be made a school Prefect and head of my house (Eastgate), I say this to put into context the final photograph in this week’s selection where I am sitting to the left of the Housemaster (right as you look at it).

As you might have gathered, this week’s doors are all from the buildings of Highgate School, photographed on my visit there last November. Definitely mixed feelings when I saw the old place. I hope you enjoy the doors.

Doors in the entrance to the 'modern' Dyne House, Highgate School, Highgate, London, November 2023
Doors in the entrance to the ‘modern’ Dyne House, Highgate School, Highgate, London, November 2023

Austere door that was never used as I recall, Highgate School, Highgate, London, November 2023
Austere door that was never used as I recall, Highgate School, Highgate, London, November 2023

Fancy glass door that simply wasn't there in my day, Highgate School, Highgate, London, November 2023
Fancy glass door on a building that wasn’t there in my day, Highgate School, Highgate, London, November 2023

The main entrance gate and doorway, Highgate School, Highgate, London, November 2023
The main entrance gate and doorway, Highgate School, Highgate, London, November 2023

Doors and steps to the school chapel, Highgate School, Highgate, London, November 2023
Doors and steps to the school chapel, Highgate School, Highgate, London, November 2023

Gate to the quadrangle (I think that is what it was called), Highgate School, Highgate, London, November 2023
Gate to the quadrangle (I think that is what it was called), Highgate School, Highgate, London, November 2023

Door and stairs to the main school hall, Highgate School, Highgate, London, November 2023
Door and stairs to the main school hall, Highgate School, Highgate, London, November 2023

Eastgate house photograph circa. 1980/81 in front of the school halll door, Highgate School, Highgate, London, November 2023
Eastgate house photograph circa. 1980/81 in front of the school hall door, Highgate School, Highgate, London, November 2023

I am sure that is it the same for many of us that our school days contribute immeasurably to who we become. I have spend many of my adult years gently unpicking and scrutinising my time at Highgate School, and think I now have a much healthier relationship with the place and circumstance I found myself in, and have challenged the attitudes and prejudices that surrounded me. I am content with it.

More of an essay than a Thursday doors – I promise to revert back to concentrating on doors next week, when I will feature some more Highgate doors.

If you have made it this far, you probably like doors, and you really ought to take a look at the No Facilities blog by Dan Anton who has taken over the hosting of Thursday Doors from Norm 2.0 blog. Links to more doorscursions can be found in the comments section of Dan Anton’s Thursday Doors post.

by Scooj

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Thursday doors – 2 May 2024 – Doors from Highgate, London

Doors 263 – Doors from Highgate, London, November 2023 (Part II)

The trip to my old stomping ground of Highgate Village in November last year, where I spent my teenage years, was both surprising and nostalgic. Naturally in my youth one door seemed to be much the same as another, and I never looked beyond their functionality, so ‘discovering’ these Highgate doors as an older and wiser person was more than a passing pleasure.

This second selection of doors hints at the time of day, early afternoon, as the low autumn sun was casting shadows, and the light was fading. There is no theme to the doors this week, just another eclectic display captured during an hour-long walk. I sound the whole thing a slightly ‘out of body’ experience, struggling to get to grips with the fact that I walked these streets most days of my life to and from school.

I hope you enjoy this week’s doors as much as I did.

There is a bonus story about the Highgate Pantry, which used to be Wylies Bakers Shop, when I lived there. A school friend and I used to run the school Zoological Society, which was a very grand name for a brick out building where we used to house small pets, such as rabbits, mice, gerbils, rats and an Axolotl called Wobert. We looked after school pupil’s pets during the holidays too sometimes.

Feeding the animals was always a bit difficult and supplies would run low, so we hatched the idea of asking Wylies bakery if they had any leftover food which we could use to feed the pets. To our utter surprise, they were more than happy to give us ‘stale’ bread, buns, pastries and the like at the end of the day in a large brown paper sack. So roughly twice a week we’d collect our sack to feed the animals. Naturally, being teenage boys with a creative streak, we’d select out the best buns for ourselves, which we’d eat and share with school friends, the rest went to the small mammals. For a couple of years, the Zoological Society became very popular indeed.

Pink doors of the Highgate Pantry (formerly Wylies Bakery), Highgate, London, November 2023
Pink doors of the Highgate Pantry (formerly Wylies Bakery), Highgate, London, November 2023

Prince of Wales pub and doors, Highgate, London, November 2023
Prince of Wales pub and doors, Highgate, London, November 2023

Woolaston and Pauncefort Almshouses doors, Highgate, London, November 2023
Woolaston and Pauncefort Almshouses doors, Highgate, London, November 2023

Yellow door, black door, green door, Highgate, London, November 2023
Yellow door, black door, green door, Highgate, London, November 2023

Two black doors, Highgate, London, November 2023
Two black doors, Highgate, London, November 2023

Red panelled door and fanlight, Highgate, London, November 2023
Red panelled door and fanlight, Highgate, London, November 2023

Fine blue door, fanlight and portico, Highgate, London, November 2023
Fine blue door, fanlight and portico, Highgate, London, November 2023

Modern door, Highgate, London, November 2023
Modern door, Highgate, London, November 2023

Another week draws to an end. More to come from Highgate next time.

If you have made it this far, you probably like doors, and you really ought to take a look at the No Facilities blog by Dan Anton who has taken over the hosting of Thursday Doors from Norm 2.0 blog. Links to more doorscursions can be found in the comments section of Dan Anton’s Thursday Doors post.

by Scooj

Thursday doors – 25 April 2024 – Doors from Highgate, London

Doors 262 – Doors from Highgate, London, November 2023 (Part I)

Last November I went to London to visit one of my uncles who has been rather unwell. He lives in  Highgate in North London, where I lived for much of the first eighteen years of my life. After paying my uncle a visit, I thought I’d nip up to Highgate Village which was once so familiar to me when I was growing up, and where I went to secondary school.

Of course when I lived there I never really took in the special place, the architecture and of course the doors – I think appreciation of doors is something that comes with age. This post is the first of several selections of doors that I managed to snap in the space of an hour, before a rapid retreat back to Bristol. My uncle, in case you are wondering, is recovering well albeit quite slowly. I hope you enjoy this week’s selection:

This is Highgate! - door and glass-panelled shopfront, Highgate, London, November 2023
This is Highgate! – door and glass-panelled shopfront, Highgate, London, November 2023

The gates to Waterlow Park where I spent many happy moments, Highgate, London, November 2023
The gates to Waterlow Park where I spent many happy moments, Highgate, London, November 2023

High security door? Highgate, London, November 2023
High security door? Highgate, London, November 2023

Park View blue door, Highgate, London, November 2023
Park View blue door, Highgate, London, November 2023

Yellow door with fancy crest, Highgate, London, November 2023
Yellow door with fancy crest, Highgate, London, November 2023

Red door and steps, Highgate, London, November 2023
Red door and steps, Highgate, London, November 2023

Green door with large flat awning and worn steps, Highgate, London, November 2023
Green door with large flat awning and worn steps, Highgate, London, November 2023

Grey doors of the Angel Inn where many happy hours were spent, Highgate, London, November 2023
Grey doors of the Angel Inn where many happy hours were spent, Highgate, London, November 2023

Spending time in Highgate and writing this post now fills me with nostalgia. There will be plenty more doors to come from Highgate in the next few weeks. May I wish you a very happy weekend.

If you have made it this far, you probably like doors, and you really ought to take a look at the No Facilities blog by Dan Anton who has taken over the hosting of Thursday Doors from Norm 2.0 blog. Links to more doorscursions can be found in the comments section of Dan Anton’s Thursday Doors post.

by Scooj

Thursday doors – 18 April 2024 – Doors of Nottingham

Doors 261 – Doors of Nottingham, November 2023 (Part III)

I am writing this post yesterday on a rather nice LNER train travelling from Peterborough, via London, to Bristol. Of course, I took the opportunity during an overnight stay to find some doors and street art while in Peterborough, but that is not important right now (Police Squad reference).

This is the third and final part of doors from a Nottingham doorscursion I made in November last year. There will be a follow-up series of posts from Nottingham following a visit I made earlier this spring, but I’ll post those in due course.

There are quite a few doors this week, another rather eclectic mix, but that is what happens when you wander aimlessly through a place. I hope you enjoy them.

Huge depot hinged doors, Nottingham, November 2023
Huge depot hinged doors, Nottingham, November 2023

High door with the steps mysteriously missing, Nottingham, November 2023
High door with the steps mysteriously missing, Nottingham, November 2023

Old door in an old wall, Nottingham, November 2023
Old door in an old wall, Nottingham, November 2023

Door with floral gateway, Nottingham, November 2023
Door with floral gateway, Nottingham, November 2023

Panelled arch doors, Nottingham, November 2023
Panelled arch doors, Nottingham, November 2023

Vibrant blue door, Nottingham, November 2023
Vibrant blue door, Nottingham, November 2023

A touch of Art Nouveau in these doors, Nottingham, November 2023
A touch of Art Nouveau in these doors, Nottingham, November 2023

Notts Bank Chamber doors, Nottingham, November 2023
Notts Bank Chamber doors, Nottingham, November 2023

Recessed door up steps, with fine entrance, Nottingham, November 2023
Recessed door up steps, with fine entrance, Nottingham, November 2023

Peeled paint on a door creating a patina effect, Nottingham, November 2023
Peeled paint on a door creating a patina effect, Nottingham, November 2023

Old building, with a single door (established 1643), Nottingham, November 2023
Old building, with a single door (established 1643), Nottingham, November 2023

Farewell then Nottingham for a little while at least, it has been fun. I haven’t yet decided which collection from my files to share next, suffice it to say, I have tons. May I wish you a happy weekend.

If you have made it this far, you probably like doors, and you really ought to take a look at the No Facilities blog by Dan Anton who has taken over the hosting of Thursday Doors from Norm 2.0 blog. Links to more doorscursions can be found in the comments section of Dan Anton’s Thursday Doors post.

by Scooj

Thursday doors – 11 April 2024 – Doors of Nottingham

Doors 260 – Doors of Nottingham, November 2023 (Part II)

This week I share some more doors from Nottingham from a work trip I made back in November 2023. I think the fun thing about visiting cities is that there are always so many interesting doors to photograph, which is a good thing, especially as I find it challenging to find new doors from my home city of Bristol. All the doors posted in this three-part series from Nottingham were captured during a one and a half hour walk between the hotel I was staying in and the office.

There are so many curious doors and architectural periods in Nottingham that I was rather spoilt, snapping away to my heart’s content. I hope you enjoy this week’s selection.

Graffiti door, Nottingham, November 2023
Graffiti door, Nottingham, November 2023

Door with witty street art, Nottingham, November 2023
Door with witty street art, Nottingham, November 2023

Green panelled door, Nottingham, November 2023
Green panelled door, Nottingham, November 2023

Gated black door with boot scrapers, Nottingham, November 2023
Gated black door with boot scrapers, Nottingham, November 2023

Nottingham School of Blackbelts door, Nottingham, November 2023
Nottingham School of Blackbelts door, Nottingham, November 2023

1930s The Lord Roberts pub doors, Nottingham, November 2023
1930s The Lord Roberts pub doors, Nottingham, November 2023

Blue double doors and door within a door, Nottingham, November 2023
Blue double doors and door within a door, Nottingham, November 2023

Double garage doors and doors within doors, Nottingham, November 2023
Double garage doors and doors within doors, Nottingham, November 2023

Pimped London cab? - EKO Mobile Barber car doors, Nottingham, November 2023
Pimped London cab? – EKO Mobile Barber car doors, Nottingham, November 2023

Quite an eclectic bunch this week with no theme to connect them, but I quite like that as it gives you a flavour of the diversity of architecture and styles in the city. One more post from this Nottingham  visit to come next week, until then, have a great weekend.

If you have made it this far, you probably like doors, and you really ought to take a look at the No Facilities blog by Dan Anton who has taken over the hosting of Thursday Doors from Norm 2.0 blog. Links to more doorscursions can be found in the comments section of Dan Anton’s Thursday Doors post.

by Scooj

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