Happy Thursday everyone! This week’s doors are from our recent trip to Launceston, I feel very lucky to still have some leftover. Please let me know if you have a favourite this week.
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I have a soft spot for number five and I love absolutely everything to do with it. The sophistication of its appearance, the wreath, the tiled path leading to the door and the carefully positioned plants.
Happy Thursday everyone and welcome to another week of wonderful doors. This week I want to show you all a fantastic little church that we spotted in a quirky place called Campbell Town in Tasmania. We passed through here on the way to Coles Bay from Launceston and it was love at first sight. Charming country stores, inviting coffee shops and a quiet, rural church made from stone walls, just made this the most perfect place to take a pit stop.
Campbell Town Parish Church (St Luke’s) has been opening and closing for almost two centuries. Built in the 1830s, the church stands quietly on what was once one of Tasmania’s busiest colonial routes, its solid sandstone walls promising shelter, order and permanence in an often harsh new settlement.
There is a quiet balance to the doorway, with little decoration and a sense of order that feels deliberate. I adore its simplicity, the three windows above and the two plant pots carefully positioned, allowing the door to feel less like an entrance to the past and more like one still in use.
Happy Thursday everyone and welcome to another week of wonderful doors. This week I am showcasing a special door found right in the heart of Sydney’s CBD. I stumbled across these doors yesterday while walking past the Public Library of New South Wales in Sydney. I have passed the building plenty of times before, but had never really stopped to look closely at the entrance.
The main entrance doors of what was originally called the Public Library of New South Wales (now part of the State Library and commonly known as the Mitchell Library) were installed in 1941, marked above the doorway in Roman numerals (MCMXLI).
Each door panel features sculpted portrait heads of figures linked to exploration, navigation and the early recording of Australia and the Pacific. The faces stand out strongly from the doors, giving them a solid and lasting presence, whilst the lower panels show sailing ships, referencing the long journeys that carried people, books and ideas across the world.
Set into the sandstone façade, the doors function as both an entrance and a permanent public artwork, quietly reflecting the library’s role in collecting, preserving and sharing history.
What I love about these doors is the quiet strength they appear to have. There is the history embedded in the faces and ships, the craftsmanship in the fine detail of the bronze, and the richness of the colour against the warm sandstone surrounding it. It is the kind of doorway that makes you slow down for a moment before walking through, a reminder that buildings, like books, carry stories if you take the time to look.
Happy Thursday everyone and welcome to my 150th doors post!!! This week I am delighted to feature some doors from my recent trip to Tasmania, with the focus on Launceston and I look forward to creating a blog post of our trip in the coming days. I was absolutely gobsmacked with the beautiful buildings in Launceston and the stunning doors to match. As always, please let me know if you have a favourite this week. Many thanks!
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My favourite this week is number 5, who doesn’t love a yellow door? It’s so welcoming and happy looking and I love the view to the outside world.
My last festive door of the year. I hope you’re all having a lovely holiday season. Today is Boxing Day or some may know it as St. Stephen’s Day. Here in Australia, there are massive Boxing Day sales, similar to that in Ireland and the UK. We had to buy a couple of suits for the wedding we’re attending next week and I’m delighted to say it was a success. How do you spend today, the day after Christmas Day?
Happy Thursday everyone and welcome to another week of festive doors. I have three doors to show and these are the last of my Christmas collection. I’m off now for a few days so will begin my Christmas shopping today and we plan to call over to Bondi to pay our respects. Have a lovely day everyone and I hope you enjoy the lead up to the celebrations. My favourite this week is number three as it is extremely festive looking and very elegant. Do you have a fave this week?
Happy Thursday everyone and welcome to another wonderful week of doors. The past few days I have been really hopeful to find some festive doors for the lead up to Christmas and my luck came in at the beginning of the week when I took a walk through Surry Hills in the city. Lots of beautiful doors with festive wreaths! As always, please let me know if you have a favourite this week.
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I love them all but I will choose number three as my favourite this week. I absolutely love the shade of green and how the wreath matches beautifully. What do you think?
Happy Thursday everyone and welcome to another week of wonderful doors. This week I thought it would be appropriate to showcase some festive red doors as we enter the Christmas season. As always, let me know if you have a favourite this week.
I absolutely love all these doors but this week I am going with number one being my favourite from Newry, Northern Ireland. It isn’t as bright as the other doors but I love how it has a quiet and understated charm. I really love the stone work of the building, the door frame and that stunning transom window. I also really like how the door is slightly ajar, teasing us with what could be inside!
Today’s door is another beauty from Paddington and belongs to a stunning little house, hidden in the shadows. If someone could just give me this house to live in, I would be extremely grateful! Haha wishful thinking but how stunning is this place?!
Featured as part of Becky’s November Shadows challenge
It’s Thursday again already and that can only mean one thing…time to showcase some doors! I have a few more doors to display from one of my favourite suburbs for doors, Paddington. I’m sure you are all sick to death of hearing about this place but it has the most fantastic doors in the state, maybe even the country! I know that’s a bold statement but I am yet to meet another place like it. There are a few neighbouring suburbs that can give Paddington a run for its money but I feel that they are also extensions of Paddington, for example, Darlinghurst and Surry Hills, both neighbours to Paddington. As always, let me know if you have a favourite this week.
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I absolutely love doors 2 and 3, how cheery and uplifting they both look. I wonder did they choose the colours together as they match perfectly. The design of these town houses is just fantastic and don’t be fooled to think these are small town houses as they are huge inside, extending backwards for quite a distance! I have been lucky to have been in a few of these and they are just as stunning on the inside! Have a great Thursday everybody!!!
Happy Thursday everyone and welcome to another week of wonderful doors! This week I am combining two challenges with the one image, inspired by Brian from Bushboys World. I have a beautiful door that belongs to a house in Paddington (one of my favourite suburbs) that hides in the silent shadows. This door is the most amazing colour of green and has matching green wooden window shutters. I love how the trees surrounding the house cast big shadows over it, protecting it from the sun. The white picket fence is the icing on the cake!
Also posted as part of Becky’s November shadows challenge.
Welcome to another week featuring some amazing Doors of WordPress. I was fortunate enough to spot some fantastic doors last weekend when we were staying at The Rocks in Sydney. Therefore, the doors featured this week were all spotted there at The Rocks, almost like a Rocks special episode of doors. This is a very popular tourist spot with a very interesting history. You can read more about this area here if you so wish.
I was really hoping to explore Darlinghurst and Five Ways today but alas, the rains have returned again to Sydney. That will be for another day, all being well. Please check out my doors below and do not hesitate to let me know which one is your favourite this week.
1 – I’m a sucker for plants, flowers, wreaths on people’s doors or in the vicinity. 2 – I love the colours of the doors with the colour of the building. As well as the doors, the windows and lights also add to the quaintness and character of the building. 3 – Amazing colours and I love the door knobs. 4 – I really like the steps here and the door to me looks quite old and rustic, almost a medieval or Game of Thrones feel. 5 – The colours here are fantastic and look quite regal to me. Also the door knocker above the handle looks great. 6 – Great colour and design. I also love the light to the side of the door. 7 – What a great building. You can’t really see the door too well but I still liked it. I was going to remove the bins from the photograph but then I thought it maybe adds a “je ne sais quoi” to the image. 8 – I love the appearance of the red door with the rustic brick work, looks quite European to me.
That’s my lot for this week. Which one do you prefer? Have you ever been to The Rocks in Sydney? It is honestly such a beautiful area, with cobbled streets and meandering pathways all around. You can spend a lot of time here and I never tire of visiting. It’s a bonus that there are so many amazing doors to discover and I have only scratched the surface.