It’s Thursday! I have been looking forward to this all week.
Below are a few of my favorite doors from my recent trip to Paris. There are too many to share in one post so I will likely provide more in coming weeks. I hope you enjoy. And as always, I come home from a trip like this wanting to replace the door on my own house…

Door inside the Notre Dame

Door outside the Notre Dame. This door has actually made an appearance on my blog once before. But, look at it! It is magnificent.

Door outside the Notre Dame. It’s spectacular.

Some Graffiti on what look like an old doorway in the Siene just below the Notre Dame
Check out some of my previous doors from France and all over the world by clicking here.
Thanks to Norm 2.0 for inspiring me to share my doors!
Cee has also had a great door challenge recently that is well worth visiting!
I just went to Paris for the first time last year and I have to say these photos are absolutely amazing!!! Thank you SO MUCH for sharing!!
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Thank you so much. What was your favorite part?
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Montmarte was definitely my favorite place. Such a quaint (and hilly) little town rich in history!
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I really liked it there too despite the workout one gets walking around. I will have posts on that forthcoming. 🙂 Thanks for the comments.
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Thank you! What’s that expression? “They just don’t build ’em like they use to.”
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That’s for sure. And all of the old doors just fit in perfectly in Paris. They wouldn’t fit in where I live at ALL. But, I still wish I had one. It seems they almost strive to have old doors. New doors stick out like a soar thumb.
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That outer door, the carvings, everything about it: spectacular! Well done.
If you haven’t already, don’t forget to swing by and add this post to the link-up list.
Cheers 🙂
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I sure will! Thanks so much. Wish ping backs were working…
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Oh, you got a nice one there, I love that woodwork.
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Thank you. It is one of my favorite doors of all time! It is spectacular!
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Beautiful doors, Bulldog. The one outside the Notre Dame is really magnificent.
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Thank you very much. They certainly spared no expense making the doors utterly amazing on the Notre Dame. Thank you so much for the comment… 🙂
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Three very different doors. The first seems strong and practical, the second ornate and churchy, and the third modern. I can see where one and two might not fit your house, but how about number three? Could the right mural artist capture who you are and place it on your door? I am sure you would be the talk of the neighborhood. 🙂 –Curt
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Now you are talking. I think that would be a fun experiment to try. I wonder how many complaints I would get in the first week? 😉
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I’d put them all on the do-not-invite list. 🙂
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Wonderful doors for this week. 😀
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Thank you!
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Awesome shots! The construction on the Notre Dame is so beautiful!!
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Gorgeous…just love doors!!
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Really amazing these are!
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You’re just like me, I love taking pictures of doors with detailed and intricate designs. I’ve nominated you for the Liebster Award, which you can read about here: https://vstgoglobal.wordpress.com/2016/06/17/liebster-award-2016/
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Wow. Thanks for the honor! And thanks for the comment. I hope to see you visit in the future. I have two more installments of Parisian doors coming in future Thursday’s.
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I love doors! I’ve visited Notre Dame before, but I was only 15 and doors were not at my mind at that age;) It seems like I have to go back – it looks beautiful!
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I’ve been before but it was wonderful to see them again. Never gets old seeing such craftsmanship. Funny how perspectives change as you grow older huh?
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So incredibly stunning. Thank you for sharing 🙂
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Thank you for the comment!
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Amazing doors. With all the statuary, it looks like visual overload of beauty.
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It kind of is which, I suppose, is one of the many reasons it is so popular.
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Great choice Jenny. The cathedral took about 2 centuries to finish. And it was started almost a millnium ago… I normally spend a while sitting in front of Notre-Dame to look at the details. I still remember, early sixties when they cleaned all the soot of centuries and the marvels were uncovered. 🙂
(The street art is new. Wasn’t there last summer. I’ll look it up.)
Be good.
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If I had been there by myself I prob would have spent all day staring at it from every perspective. But it was very cold and very crowded. And I was really struck by the Gregorian Choir I had just enjoyed inside…
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🙂 I will look up the choir next time I go inside. 🙂
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I was part of the mass that day and it was wonderful.
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I can imagine. Mass in Notre-Dame is quite impressive. I close my eyes and imagine people from the 1300 in their medieval clothes praying and chanting in Latin. 🙂
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Not too differently than those doing the same thing today…
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Exactly. Despite all our technology and some progress (health, government, education, etc.) We are not so different form our ancestors a few centuries back. 🙂
(On another note: I’ve heard that there are fires again?) 😦
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There are which is typical for summer in Ca. None as large and crazy as past years. Yet. (Knock on wood.)
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“Touchons du bois”. 😉 How did your french go when you were there?
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Non existent. I am terrible.
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No worry. It is a difficult language. Let’s work on it: “C’est difficile”. T(hat) is difficult. See the resemblance?
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Sounds a lot like Spanish!
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It does. Both languages share the same origin, Latin. Now, English vocabulary is 60% of french origin. It is easier when you look at a written text, because it takes away the accent. Theater comes from Théâtre. Vocabulary from “vocabulaire”. If you start looking at the structure of words, you will find that you can recognize some. It’s what I do all the time with foreign languages. At least within families of languages: Romance, Germanic, for instance. Slavic? No way! 🙂
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These are fabulous. You just can’t beat an old door!
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Thanks! I love them. And we just don’t have anything like that on the West Coast so it never got old looking at them around every corner in Paris.
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