Historic Blue And Red Doors Saint John | Limited Edition of 10
Brick Row House Entrances In Tree Shadow
This photograph has a quieter feeling than the first doorway image from this street. The scene is still built around symmetry, but the light changes everything. The blue door on the left and the red door on the right sit inside a deep red brick facade, framed by dark stone trim and arched brickwork. Across the front of the building, tree shadows fall over the steps, doors, and sidewalk. That broken light gives the image a softer rhythm.
I photographed this in Saint John, New Brunswick, after spending time walking through the city and not quite finding the image I wanted. That happens often enough when I travel with a camera. I can walk for hours and feel close to something, but not quite there. I eventually stepped into a local art gallery, and the curator happened to be a photographer as well. We talked for a while, and he pointed me toward a street known for its old houses. This doorway was part of that discovery.
What I like here is the mix of age, color, and shadow. The building has the heavy, crafted look of late-nineteenth-century residential architecture. The arched openings, layered brickwork, dark carved trim, and raised wood panels all speak to a time when even a doorway was treated as part of the building’s character. These were not flat, forgettable entrances. They were built with shape, depth, and detail.
The blue and red doors give the image its first visual pull. Then the brick takes over. Then the shadows. The more I look at it, the less the photograph feels like a simple architectural study and the more like a small portrait of a street. Nothing is staged. Nothing is polished clean. The worn steps, old railings, house numbers, uneven brick tones, and leafy shade all belong to the place.
This image works well for someone who enjoys historic architecture but wants more than a straight record of a building. It has color, but not in a loud way. It has structure, but the tree shadow keeps it from feeling too formal. I can see it working in a hallway, study, living room, office, or any room where old-city character fits naturally.
Each limited edition print is personally signed and includes a certificate of authenticity. I produce the prints with archival pigment inks on Epson Premium Luster paper, preserving the color, texture, and fine architectural detail of the original photograph.
You can see more images like this in my historic door wall art.
© Dan Kosmayer, 2026
Edition Information
This photograph is released as a signed and numbered edition of 10 prints across all available sizes. Each print is individually signed and numbered by the artist on the reverse and accompanied by a certificate of authenticity.
Once all 10 prints have been sold, this work will be permanently retired, and no further numbered editions will be produced in any size or format. A small number of Artist Proofs may be retained by the artist for archival or exhibition purposes.
Museum Quality Fine Art Prints
All prints are produced by the artist using archival pigment inks on professional photographic paper with a subtle luster finish.
This paper offers a balanced surface that enhances tonal depth, preserves fine detail, and reduces glare under typical indoor lighting conditions.
Each print is carefully inspected prior to dispatch to ensure consistency of finish and presentation.
Free Worldwide Delivery
Each print is personally produced, signed, and packaged by me at my studio in Haliburton, Ontario, Canada.
Orders are shipped worldwide via Canada Post at no additional cost. Delivery times may vary based on destination and local customs processing.
During periods of travel for on-location photographic work, dispatch may be delayed until I return to the studio.