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An observational survey of historic Venetian doors, thresholds, pigments, materials, and building traditions. This short observational film records the materials, colors, and construction of historic doorways throughout Venice, examining how doors and thresholds function within the city’s architectural fabric.Doors are among the oldest architectural technologies in hum an history. Hinged wooden doors were used in the ancient Near East more than 4,000 years ago, replacing earlier barriers such as woven mats, hides, and simple wooden shutters placed across openings. As permanent buildings and cities developed, doors became essential for security, privacy, and the control of interior space. Venice preserves a remarkable range of historic door construction. Most doors are built from thick hardwood planks—oak, larch, or walnut—reinforced with internal braces to withstand the humid lagoon climate. Their surfaces are typically painted with mineral-based pigments in deep reds, greens, blues, and browns. Historically these colors were produced from earth and metal oxides mixed into oil-based paints. Deep reds often derived from iron oxide pigments sometimes referred to as Venetian red. Greens were commonly produced using copper-based compounds such as verdigris or later chromium oxides. Blues ranged from Prussian blue pigments introduced in the eighteenth century to later industrial formulations. Browns and darker tones frequently came from umber and other natural earth pigments. Over time the repeated repainting of these doors created surfaces composed of multiple layers of pigment, each generation applying new coats as earlier layers weathered and cracked. The resulting textures record decades—sometimes centuries—of maintenance. The doors themselves are framed in Istrian limestone, a dense white stone imported from quarries along the Adriatic coast and widely used throughout Venice for its resistance to saltwater erosion. Forged iron hinges, knockers, and handles reflect centuries of Venetian metalworking traditions. Stone thresholds, often worn smooth by generations of use, also help protect interiors during periods of acqua alta. This film records nearly every doorway and threshold encountered while traversing the city, documenting the materials, craft traditions, and historic building practices preserved within Venice’s architectural fabric. #VeniceArchitecture #HistoricDoors #veniceitaly