r/Gothic

Image 1 — Got the keys! PA, 293k, 6.125%
Image 2 — Got the keys! PA, 293k, 6.125%
🔥 Hot ▲ 12.5k r/Gothic+4 crossposts

Got the keys! PA, 293k, 6.125%

My husband and I (29M & 30F) finally closed on our historic church we’re turning into our house. 6.125% and total loan amount 293k but we only paid 116k for the building and then 149k for renovation and a 14k contingency in escrow. We were under contract for over 3 months and after numbers set back and 3 different lenders it’s finally all ours. Renovation has started and phase 1 will be done by end of July. We used an FHA 203k and if you have any questions please ask. I know everyone said this was the most difficult and impossible loan but I’m hard headed and wouldn’t take no for an answer. I think these are extremely underrated and we just didn’t have the time or energy to fight for a turn key in this economy with people bidding 100k+ over asking.

✨PSA✨ I know some of you are wanting to see the renovations process and I’m documenting and posting everything on TT, YouTube and IG my handle to all is cjdzimmer follow along to see all the pics and videos!

u/bellzbellzbellz — 7 days ago
▲ 205 r/Gothic+1 crossposts

Chapel of the Hotel de Cluny, Paris, 1485-1510

u/Kling_sor — 21 hours ago
▲ 316 r/Gothic

"Medieval City on a River", painting by Karl Friedrich Schinkel (1815)

u/goldsnow655 — 6 days ago
▲ 211 r/Gothic

"Medieval City on a River", painting by Karl Friedrich Schinkel (1815)

u/ashlyn-fayew — 4 days ago
▲ 3 r/Gothic+1 crossposts

Gothic Remake + G1 Classic? (PS5)

Hello! I want to preorder Gothic Remake for PS5, psychical edition. I heard that if you preorder you get Gothic 1 Classic on disc as preorder bonus. Where to preorder to get it please?

Sincerely
Marko

reddit.com
u/primitivoigv — 21 hours ago
▲ 480 r/Gothic

Notre-Dame is back open and the wait can be long. If you don’t want to spend an hour in line, walk ten minutes north to Église Saint-Eustache, next to Les Halles.

It isn’t Notre-Dame. Anyone calling it “basically the same without the crowd” is overselling you. The history, the rose windows, the river setting, the symbolic weight, those don’t transfer. But the things that actually hit you when you walk into a Paris cathedral, the scale and the light, do.

A few specifics that hold up:

- The nave vault is 33.45m, marginally higher than Notre-Dame’s 33m (sources: Wikipedia, official Notre-Dame site).

- Construction ran from 1532 to 1637, which is why half the building is Gothic skeleton and half is Renaissance ornament. That mix is rare and a bit awkward, in a good way.

- The pipe organ has roughly 8,000 pipes, the largest in France. Free recitals most Sundays, schedule on saint-eustache.org.

You won’t get the rose windows or the relics. You will get a near-empty interior, a genuinely strange building, and time to actually look at it.

Notre-Dame from outside, Saint-Eustache from inside. Defensible itinerary if your Paris days are short.

What is your favorite church in Paris?

u/Ok-Sheepherder-870 — 14 days ago
▲ 312 r/Gothic

I never brought a tripod to a cathedral. It felt (and somehow still feels) a bit awkward; I rather want to be there as a christian, be silent and in awe of the astonishing building.

Besides, I mainly write articles about cathedrals for my website churchheritage.eu and I’m not a photographer that much.

But yesterday I brought my tripod to Chartres cathedral and took this shot.

How would you rate the photo? Any suggestions I can do to make a better shot?

About the window:

Queen Blanche of Castile and her son Louis IX paid for the north rose of Chartres Cathedral around 1235. Their heraldry sits openly in the glass: fleurs-de-lis for France, the castles of Castile for Blanche’s house. The window runs warmer than the older twelfth-century glass at Chartres, with reds and golds dominating where the earlier panels lean deep blue.

At its centre is the Virgin and Child enthroned; around them, twelve kings of Judah and twelve prophets, the genealogy of Christ from Matthew 1. The political point is not subtle: Capetian rule grafted directly onto biblical kingship during a contested regency.

u/Ok-Sheepherder-870 — 11 days ago