VJ UNION

Ventanas Y Puertas De Herreria -

Ventanas Y Puertas De Herreria -

Isabel reached for the iron latch, then paused. The old door had no peephole, no intercom. Only the iron lions, whose empty metal eyes seemed to stare at her. For a moment, she hesitated. In recent years, fear had crept into the city like a slow fog. People locked their doors early. They added padlocks to their iron gates. They forgot that the iron had once been made to invite, not to repel.

Every house on the street had its windows and doors crafted from forged iron— ventanas y puertas de herrería —but none were as famous as those of the tall, ochre-walled house at the end. The artisan who had made them, old Don Mateo, had long since passed, but his work remained: a symphony of black scrolls, hammered leaves, and wrought vines that seemed to grow straight from the stone. ventanas y puertas de herreria

The ironwork was not merely functional. It told stories. On the heavy main door, two lions faced each other, their manes made of a hundred curled spirals. Above the kitchen window, a grapevine twisted so realistically that birds occasionally tried to perch on its iron fruit. And on the balcony overlooking the street, a sunburst spread its rays, each tip ending in a small, open hand—as if offering a blessing to everyone who passed below. Isabel reached for the iron latch, then paused