Saw this outside a shop in Salado, Texas. 
Thursday is for doors over at Norm 2.0.
Saw this outside a shop in Salado, Texas. 
Thursday is for doors over at Norm 2.0.
Another log cabin door. The Sneed Log Cabin in Cameron, Texas, was built in 1849.

Sneed log cabin in Cameron, Texas
Thursday is for doors over at Norm 2.0.

At the Kachina Lodge in Taos, New Mexico
Thursday is for doors over at Norm 2.0.
Looking into the Alley Log Cabin, built in 1836.

Alley Log Cabin, Columbus, Texas
Thursday is for doors over at Norm 2.0.
A lot of older homes were build with two front doors. There are a lot of theories as to reason for the two identical front doors. Odd, isn’t it? Here is an architectural feature widely used (in several US regions over several decades) and we don’t have a definitive reason as to why. Here is a sampling of reasons.
I have a friend moving into such a house in September. One front door opens into a living room, the other into a bedroom. Why? I don’t know. This just might be one of the mysteries of life.

In Columbus, Texas
Thursday is for doors over at Norm 2.0.