My photo of the square didn't come out very good. Beth, do you have one? We liked Taos much better than either old town Albuquerque or Santa Fe. Both of them were way to tarted up, no real feel of an old town. The streets were too wide, their was no history of the buildings, however Taos was everything we were hoping for. We kept finding narrow little streets filled with neat shops, people sitting outside reading newspapers, dogs wandering around, unleashed, but at their masters heels. Street people were singing and playing guitars.
As always we looked for churches. We found this one, it looked a bit modern and we couldn't find a date.
The Alter.
This was at the back of the church. Is it called the Sanctuary? A woman was kneeling and praying, so we waited until she left to take the photo.
The windows were done in a stained glass process called Dalle de Verre. That is big thick chunks of glass which are shaped with a hammer and then set in concrete. Men like doing this process more than the leaded style.
a murel.
We finally found the OLD church. Called St Francis of Assis. There was no I at the end. It was built 1813-15. Just as I tried to take a photo this guy popped out from behind the gate.
Interior of the church,
You could see the straw in the Adobe.
And this is what happens when Adobe is beglected. It just melts away.