Doors of Malta

While I sort through the hundreds of photos from our recent trip to Malta I’m sharing a few posts with snapshots of generic themes that I like to look out for. Doors are a favourite with many people and Malta has some wonderful examples: from the beautifully maintained, as in the header photo, to the completely dilapidated. Many also have marvellous door knockers and / or religious icons alongside and I’ve included some of them too.
Here follows a set of thematic galleries. Locations are in the captions which can be accessed by clicking on any image.




































That turned out to be a bigger collection than I expected! One final (shorter) theme to come then I will be ready to write about our walks.

Those doors are gorgeous! I’ve always wanted to go to Malta!
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Thanks, Ann – good to hear from you! Malta is lovely, I’m sure you’d like it.
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Magnificent examples of doors. 🙂
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Thank you! I thought so.
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Hi Anabel – somewhere I’ve never got to … my mother visited and was entranced. That yellow door is ‘bright’!! Love the selection you’ve given us … I hope you include some dishes from the restaurants you visited in your next selection – perhaps another one? Cheers Hilary
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We enjoyed Malta very much – yes, like your mother, quite entranced.
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Beautiful photos! Amazing and captivating colours and details! Very nice doors! Thank you so much for sharing. Warm greetings to you from a retired lady living in Montreal, Canada.
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Thank you Linda, I’m glad you like them! I was very taken with them myself.
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Some fancy doors! I love the yellow with the seahorse 😀
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It’s very attractive, I agree.
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I liked the Boom Defence door!
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That was an intriguing one! Boom defence was apparently an anti submarine net.
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And what do you suppose that chair was doing hanging on the wall?
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I think the inhabitant will take it down to sit in the sun.
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These are gorgeous, Anabel! You’ve outdone Andrew by a mile (but don’t tell him I said so!) xx
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Ah well, he ekes his out, I have thrown all mine in at once!
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That open blue door with the light beckoning– I would have been hard pressed not to explore! You got some fabulous ones but I also wonder about the busyness of the business ones! Bernie
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It is inviting, isn’t it? But I expect I would have got thrown out on my ear!
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You looked at a lot of doors!
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And there were many more to look at! I have never seen so many attractive doors.
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In colour sequence. Impressive. I just love the creativity of the door nobs.
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The door knobs were invariably lovely but I was reluctant to get too close to most of them in case someone came out of their house to find me brandishing my phone at them!
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Haha, not a good look 😉
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Green seems to be a popular door color in Malta! I’m a fan of the stained and/or peeled doors and the ghost ones. I don’t think I should start collecting door photographs, though, as I’m already taking way too many photos everywhere!!
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I was surprised that green was the most popular! I expected it to be red.
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Brilliant photos of all those amazing doors and knockers! Such variety and colour to enjoy. I wonder who lives behind them though…you could write a book!!
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They are fascinating, aren’t they? A real expression of personality.
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A kaleidoscope of doors – like Dublin! (Although different designs)
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Yes, it made me think of Dublin a bit – though very different in most ways including the weather!
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Oh my goodness, I want to go to Malta next weekend just based on these glorious doors! The photos are spectacular and you could truly make an art show out of them. Doors speak to so much promise, don’t they? Gorgeous post.
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They do, you have to wonder what lies behind them. I’d love to meet the people who choose the psychedelic doors, I imagine them as really quirky.
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I remember photographing that first elegant building in Mdina, and I suspect a few of these other doors too 🙂 I’m intrigued by the ‘Economical Grocery’ and also by ‘Boom Defence’!
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Apparently the Boom Defence was a metal anti-submarine net which could be lowered to protect the harbour when necessary. I think the green door hides what was the control room and is now a small museum. However, I only found that out when I looked it up later, there was certainly no sign of activity the day we passed.
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What a great idea. Love the geometric lines, primary colours and small flashes of ornate design.
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They really know how to do a door! Some of the older streets round us have some nice ones, but nothing like this.
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A fabulous collection of doors Anabel (you’re tempting me to do something similar myself when I’m next in Manchester). The psychedelic ones look great and I do like the yellow one – yellow is such a sunny, happy colour and the seahorse knocker looks cute. Favourites are the red ones though.
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Funny how the yellow divides people! I like the red ones best too – our own door is red though much plainer than these. I was sure red would be the most common colour but that seems to be green.
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What a brilliant collection, Anabel! Pleased to see you included a couple of dilapidated ones! And love the seahorse on the yellow!
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How could I resist, Sue? You have taught me the attractions of dilapidation. In just a few comments it seems the yellow door is proving divisive!
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So pleased that I have taught you not to overlook dilapidation!
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I like them all but the level of close up detail in the psychedelic doors is exceptional. Must have taken ages to create them… and very expensive. Bob. BSS.
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They are amazing, aren’t they? I have never seen anythIng quite like them. They are next door on a small, narrow street so the occupants must have collaborated.
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You’ve gone to town here. These are fabulous. Except for the yellow door. There’s one not far from here, and it just looks … wrong
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Yellow is very uncommon for a door. I can only think of one locally, and it’s much paler than this one. I loved the seahorse door knocker.
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Ah. Now knockers are a different story. They’re usually of greater interest.
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Some fabulous doors! I do like the solitary yellow one. Were you tempted to open the ones that might have been businesses? Anyway, a great collection.
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Interestingly, Margaret who commented immediately after you picked out the yellow door as the only one she didn’t like! They are certainly uncommon. Those ex? business doors looked very firmly shut.
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