The Homes That
Made Me
Slow Down
 
There are homes you notice because they're large.
Then there are homes you notice because they ask you to slow down.
Sometimes it's the curve of a stone archway. Sometimes it's the way afternoon light settles across old brick. Sometimes it's a front door that has welcomed generations before you.
Over the past several months, I've spent mornings walking neighbourhoods throughout Windsor-Essex with a camera in hand—not searching for the biggest homes, but for the ones that quietly stay with you long after you've walked past.
These photographs aren't a ranking of the city's finest houses.
They're simply the homes that made me stop.
Every city has homes that become landmarks without ever trying to.
Not because they're extravagant, but because they refuse to look like anything else around them.
Windsor's older neighbourhoods reward curiosity.
The more slowly you walk them, the more details begin to appear.
Brickwork.
Stone.
Curves.
Craftsmanship.
Sometimes the smallest details leave the strongest impression.
Good design isn't tied to one era.
Sometimes it's expressed through cedar and glass.
Sometimes through stone and proportion.
Different styles.
The same thoughtful intention.
These homes aren't connected by style.
Or age.
Or price.
They're connected by something much harder to define.
They simply made me stop.
Know a remarkable home, unique property, or neighbourhood story that deserves to be featured?
I'd love to hear from you.