I am definitely under the cosh at work at the moment, and simply haven’t had enough time to sort out Thursday doors, so for the second consecutive week I am serving up some street art doors from my archive – these ones were originally posted in August and September 2022.
Here we go:
Mote, M32 cycle path, Bristol, July 2022Zabou, Upfest 22, Bristol, May 2022Taker One, Upfest 22, Bristol, May 2022Taker One, Upfest 22, Bristol, May 2022Taboo, Lower Ashley Road, Bristol, August 2022Tanith Gould, Elton Street, Bristol, September 2022
OK, so you might have to search for the doors in these pictures, and in the last one the picture itself features a doorway, but it is the best I can do this week. I hope to collect some new doors this weekend.
Enjoy the rest of your 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.
Doors 221 – Bristol and Porto street art and graffiti doors
When I do these street art and graffiti doors, it usually signals that I am really busy at work, and don’t have time to do all the necessary admin to prepare doors to share, preferring to trawl existing pictures that I have posted on my blog under the street art category.
So let’s get straight to business with these doors from Bristol and Porto, which were originally posted on Natural Adventures in July 2022:
Jelly and apparan, Upfest 22, Bristol, May 2022
Doors painted during Upfest 2022
Aspire, Devon Road, Bristol, July 2022Face 1st, Moon Street, Bristol, July 2022Maybe, Cumberland Basin, Bristol, July 2022
Access hatch on a bridge
Maybe, Cumberland Basin, Bristol, July 2022
Access hatch on a bridge
Sepr, Upfest 22, Bristol, June 2022Mesk, Porto, Portugal, June 2022Costah, Porto, Portugal, June 2022
Cat ghost door
Hazul, Porto, Portugal, June 2022
Abstract ghost door
Hazul, Porto, Portugal, June 2022
Another abstract ghost door
Carvalho, Porto, Portugal, June 2022Unknown, Porto, Portugal, June 2022
OK, so it’s not a door, but I just love this photograph.
Well, that’s it for another week. I hope you have a great weekend. Happy Thursday 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.
I actually photographed these doors earlier this week, which is something I haven’t done for a while. More often, I tend to rifle through my archives to find a set of doors for posting on Thursdays.
Old market is a bit of a strange part of Bristol, caught between architectural periods and bordered by busy roads. It looks a little bit tatty these days, but at one time would have been a bustling market area, and some of the doors and doorways reflect this.
There are lots of pubs and places to eat or be entertained, but the volume of traffic has taken away any sense of community or cohesion – I guess it happens to many cities around the world I guess. Faded glory.
I hope you enjoy the doors – rather too many doorfies for my liking, though!
Black door/gate, Old Market, Bristol, May 2023Plain door, grand doorway, Old Market, Bristol, May 2023Pub cellar doors, Old Market, Bristol, May 2023Pub cellar doors and gates, Old Market, Bristol, May 2023It is the writing around the door that tells you something about a previous life of the building, Old Market, Bristol, May 2023
Well, that brings proceedings to a close for another week – 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.
Phew! Today has been a bit of a beast, and I haven’t had any time to post my doors until now, and just as I had settled myself to write this post, my wife called to say she had a flat tyre and as I have just renewed the insurance, could I call out the breakdown recovery. All done now, and I can resume.
I have not photographed any doors recently, so this is a bit of a throwback to 2019 and some doors I encountered in Fowey in Cornwall, dredged from my doors archive. I hope you enjoy them. I have a favourite, I wonder if you can guess which one:
Blue door and anchor knocker, Fowey, Cornwall, September 2019Short green door, Fowey, Cornwall, September 2019Frosted door doorfie, Fowey, Cornwall, September 2019Grey door and granite step, Fowey, Cornwall, September 2019Grey door with no handles or furniture, Fowey, Cornwall, September 2019Door to the old police house, Fowey, Cornwall, September 2019Front door and stunning gate, Fowey, Cornwall, September 2019
That really is all for this week – wishing 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.
Sliding doors at the front entrance, Bristol Zoo, Bristol, October 2018
Little did I know when I took these pictures in October 2018 that Bristol Zoological Gardens would close its doors for the last time on 3 September 2022. After 186 years as the world’s fifth-oldest zoo, the collection is being moved to a larger site on the northern edge of the city to its younger sibling, ‘The Wild Place’. For most Bristolians and indeed for many people living in the hinterland of the zoo, this was a very sad day indeed. Although some of the buildings in the site were old, Bristol zoo was progressive and was a leader in conservation and breeding programmes for endangered species from around the globe.
Whatever your feelings about zoos, they play a role in education and research that result in a greater good for the biodiversity of our planet. Taking myself as an example, it is certain that I was inspired by my countless visits as a child to the Zoological Society of London (London Zoo) to become a marine biologist, and spend the rest of my life working in the environmental/nature sector (doing good things, I hope).
So here are a few of the doors from the old Bristol Zoo. My only regret is that I didn’t take more photographs of this wonderful space. When the children were little, we had a family zoo membership, and it was our ‘go to’ destination, and the children’s favourite day out in the city.
Door within a door, Bristol Zoo maintenance gate, Bristol, October 2018Ghost door, Bristol Zoo, Bristol, October 2018In the butterfly house, Bristol Zoo, Bristol, October 2018Reptile house doors, Bristol Zoo, Bristol, October 2018Original aquarium entrance door, Bristol Zoo, Bristol, October 2018Photograph of the original aquarium entrance door and keepers, Bristol Zoo, Bristol, October 2018
It makes me rather sad, reflecting on these pictures, but I guess we have to preserve our very many happy memories of the zoo, and keep our fingers crossed that the developers of the site retain some of the heritage and integrity of this stunning green space.
Well that’s it until next week, 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.
Green door behind a security gate, Lone Rambler, Bristol, May 2022
A quick trawl through my archives this week has thrown up some interesting doors from around the city of Bristol. These pictures were taken a little while back, and I can’t actually remember where most of them are from.
The selection is a real mixed bag of styles and periods, which rather fairly represents the eclectic architecture in Bristol. Before the blitz, there was a much more uniform transition of architectural periods, but the bomb damage has fragmented the styles, and some of the modern replacement buildings certainly favoured function over form.
I hope you enjoy this small selection:
Green door and unusual windows, Greenbank, Bristol, January 2023Seen-better-days door, Bristol, May 2022Boring modern door and fine doorway, Bristol, May 2022Three doors, Bristol, May 2022Black door and very grand portico, Bristol, May 2022
That’s it for another week – I need to go on a couple of doorscursions soon, because my supply is drying up a little. 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.
Doors 215 – Croatia doors (part 8) – Pula leftovers
Wow, I goofed – I have been so busy this week that I thought today was Wednesday – well I was wrong. I thought I was being really clever, preparing my post this evening for tomorrow, but I was being thick/forgetful and am instead running late for today. No matter, Thursday doors is all day Thursday (at the very least) and I am well within the day.
This is the final sweep-up post of doors from our fabulous summer break last August in Croatia. Posting these doors over the last few months has been a regular reminder of just what a wonderful holiday we had. But that was then, and we have a trip to my beloved Italy lined up for this year and plenty more doors to look forward to.
So let’s get on with this final instalment of Pula doors:
Doors to the fish market, Pula, Croatia, August 2023Wooden doors with diamond panels, Pula, Croatia, August 2023Steel doors to our apartment, Pula, Croatia, August 2023Glass panelled doors, Pula, Croatia, August 2023Doors with fine patterns and ironwork, Pula, Croatia, August 2023Doors with glass panels and fine ironwork, Pula, Croatia, August 2023Wide doors with glass and ironwork, Croatia, August 2023Fancy doors and ballustraded balcony, Pula, Croatia, August 2023OK, so it’s not a door, but this shuttered window was too beautiful to leave out, Croatia, August 2023
So farewell then happy Croatia. I hope you enjoyed this series. I am going to have to work hard on something a little bit more local for the next few weeks.
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.
A quick one today, as I will be in an all-day meeting in London. This post was prepared last night. To make things easier on myself, I am recycling doors that have already appeared on Natural Adventures in my street art posts. I hope you enjoy this selection from February to May 2022:
Zake, Dean Lane, Bristol, February 2022Pelmo, Lucky Lane, Bristol, April 2022
OK, so this is not a door, but it had once been a garage entrance, so it counts as a ghost door
Hazard, Ashley Court, Bristol, February 2022Awkward, Dean Lane, Bristol, March 2022Kosc, Picton Lane, Bristol, April 2022Kosc, Picton Lane, Bristol, April 2022Willl Cross, Upfest 22, Bristol, May 2022
This stunning piece isn’t painted on a door, but in a ghost window – I felt it was worth sharing anyway.
My Dog Sighs, Upfest 22, Bristol, May 2022Karl Read, Upfest 22, Bristol, May 2022Taboo, North Street, Bristol, May 2022Hazard, High Street, Bristol, May 2022
There is a ghost door at the top of the steps.
Ant Carver, Upfest 22, Bristol, May 2022Ant Carver, Upfest 22, Bristol, May 2022Sled One and 3Dom, The Carriageworks, Bristol, May 2022
These ghost doors, above, were once magnificent gateways for the Bristol tram system, long since gone and very much missed. The original doors were then converted to windows, except for the middle one of five and then eventually they were all bricked up when the building was vacated, and remained that way for decades.
That’s it for another week. I hope I get time to complete my Croatia doors next time. May I wish you all a wonderful weekend ahead’
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.
You might be pleased to hear that this is the penultimate collection of doors from a family trip to Croatia last August. I have certainly managed to stretch this one out, which has meant there has been less pressure on me to photograph doors closer to home. Time to get out and about…
These doors are from Pula, a city heavily influenced by its Italian neighbour to the north, so much so that shops are bilingually branded and people speak both languages.
So here are the doors:
Fine ghost door, Pula, Croatia, August 2022Rusty iron doors, Pula, Croatia, August 2022Fancy villa green gate door, Pula, Croatia, August 2022New door in a doorway with history, Pula, Croatia, August 2022Nice geometry to this black door, Pula, Croatia, August 2022Beautiful iron work on these doors, Pula, Croatia, August 2022
So that’s it for this week – 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.
Finding my way home through the depths of Montpelier, I came across this stunning front door painted by Alex Lucas. Of course, such a feature shouldn’t come as too much of a surprise in this area, as Alex Lucas is the ‘Queen of Montpelier’, which is the epicentre of her work.
Alex Lucas, Montpelier, Bristol, February 2023
In this piece, two cats are interacting with one another, one above the other, cleverly following the portrait aspect of the door. The space around the cats is occupied with decorative ribbons and flowers. Who wouldn’t want a stunning personalised front door like this? The door and the artwork is so very ‘Montpelier’ if you get my drift. Brilliant.