Practically all these doors are only a few steps apart in Roma (except the first): you find them if you take Via della Lungaretta from the Belli tram 8 stop, first left to the first English book shop, and then right towards Basilica di Santa Maria in Trastevere (these church doors were covered in my Christmas edition of Thursday Doors) and the second English book shop. The true Trastevere door magic that happens then will be revealed in a Thursday to come.
Photo: MM
Wow some gorgeous doors in this collection. The day I set foot in Rome and start exploring for doors…well I don’t know if I’ll ever leave the place 🙂
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🙂 Hehe, Norm, in this case you’ll need to book a few more days for the doors… Thanks!
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Oh, what a wonderful collection! Rome is an endless resource, isn’t it? I only spent a couple of days there, but I’m still in love with it.
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Thank you, Marian Allen! It truly is, and I don’t explore it nearly enough, even though I’m there every three weeks or so.
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Wow, just gorgeous! 😀
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Thank you, Joey!
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That’s a great collections massive strong doors. They look great and I would trust them all to protect what’s behind them.
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🙂 Thanks, Dan. I guess they have been doing just that for centuries.
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These doors have all earned my seal of approval. 🙂 Makes me what to head back to Italy…or just travel anywhere. Of course, I’m visiting in Arizona, so I’m already on a trip.
janet
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Thank you from the doors, Janet. 🙂 Enjoy your trip!
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Oh, I am!
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Those are some gorgeous doors…even those with the graffiti! Rome and Italy remain on my bucket list. Like Norm I don’t think I’d want to leave once I started photographing all the things of beauty, and interest there.
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CR, Italy is always so welcoming, it’s just on you to collect. 🙂 Thanks!
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Great set of doors Manja – looks like they know how to make a real door in Rome!
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Thank you, Jane. Yes, a real door and quite a bit of everything else. 🙂
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Haven’t visited Rome yet but I love Italy and really must get there one of these days!
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What a shame that graffiti seems to have found a place all over the world. Lovely doors..but I especially mourn the loss of the patina on the turquoise and green doors…
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Oh, Judy, do not mourn too much. In Rome they have enough patina to go around. 🙂 Somehow I’m not disturbed by the graffiti on dilapidated buildings, they go together well. Sometimes they might be an incentive for quicker reconstruction.
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