Phileas Le cléateur has the key to love. Actually, he owns dozens of
them. The Parisian is using his collection of antique skeleton keys to
save as many "love locks" as possible from the famed Pont des Arts
bridge, which bears love tokens from hundreds of thousands of couples.
But this week, French officials began taking down the bridge's mesh
panels, to which the locks have been affixed and have added an extra 45
tons of dangerous weight.
Le cléateur has been using his keys to free as many padlocks as he can,
in hopes of reuniting them with their original love-struck owners. He
has "rescued" about 400 locks since he began the passion project last
November.
"I'm conscious it's a small part relative to the million locks on Pont
des Arts," he admitted. "But I spend a lot of time searching the right
key for each lock."
Le cléateur, 46, and his wife own a business that makes jewelry out of
antique keys, many of which opened 18th-century jewelry boxes and other
vintage items.
"My concept is to offer the key to happiness, the key to love, the key to success," he said.
The visits did yield success with other vintage padlocks Le cléateur eventually opened with his keys.
He and his wife are now preparing to post pictures of the locks that have been saved
on Instagram and
other social media sites to help reunite them with their rightful
owner. All they need is photographic proof of ownership, and Le cléateur
will send it back. His only request is that the couple pay for
shipping.
He said: "I don't want that it disappears (to) I don't know where," Le
cléateur said of each of the locks. "I want to give it back to the
lovers."
0 comments:
Post a Comment