Between golden-stone villages, artisan workshops, and inspiring encounters, the Beaujolais region reveals another way of traveling: slower, more human, more sensitive.
There are places that seem to resist time. In the southern Beaujolais, the villages of the “pierres dorées” belong to this rare category. Here, ochre façades capture the light like nowhere else, narrow streets wind between centuries-old houses, and ramparts tell a story spanning hundreds of years.
But beyond their beauty, it is above all the rhythm that strikes visitors. In Oingt and Theizé, two emblematic villages of the Golden Stones region, time seems to flow differently. Perhaps because those who choose to live here share a common relationship with creation: that of patience.
In these preserved villages, workshops have replaced standardized storefronts. Behind ancient doors, women and men shape their works by hand. They write, blow, paint, and assemble with the same concern for precise gesture. A discreet way of resisting the constant acceleration of our era.
Oingt, a Village Turned Creative Haven
Listed among the Most Beautiful Villages of France, Oingt could easily rely solely on its exceptional heritage. Perched on the heights of Beaujolais, it offers an almost cinematic setting. The locally extracted limestone gives it that distinctive golden hue that shifts with the hours and the seasons.
Yet Oingt is not an open-air museum. For decades, artists and artisans have settled in its narrow streets. They have found there more than an inspiring setting: an environment conducive to creation.
The Time of a Single Stroke
In his workshop nestled in the heart of the village, Yves Dimier works with ink and brush. Trained at the Beaux-Arts in Paris and influenced by East Asian calligraphy, he has developed over the years a unique visual language he describes as “written drawings.”
On the paper, trees, faces, animals, or human silhouettes emerge through a free and spontaneous gesture. The work seems to appear in seconds, yet it is the result of years of practice. The artist does not seek to faithfully reproduce reality. Instead, he tries to capture its essence, what he calls the “inner outline of things.”
In the silence of the studio, the gesture becomes almost meditative. Faced with his inks, one understands that certain creations can only exist in long timeframes.
Glass as a Living Material
A few streets away, a bluish flame lights up the workshop of Cendrine Martin. The artisan works with lampworked glass, an ancestral craft that transforms simple glass rods into delicate creations.
Under heat, the material softens, stretches, turns, and takes shape. Jewelry, decorative objects, or more poetic pieces are born from this constant dialogue between hand, fire, and matter.
Here again, everything is about patience. Understanding how glass reacts, mastering the gesture, and bringing a unique piece to life all require time. In a village itself shaped by centuries, this approach naturally finds its place.
A Pause in the Heart of the Village
At lunchtime, the narrow streets gently come alive. Located in the heart of Oingt, the Table du Donjon offers a welcome pause between the morning encounters and those of the afternoon.
From the terrace, the gaze drifts over the rooftops of Ternand and the surrounding hills. Here, as in the nearby workshops, attention to detail is part of the experience. Time slows down even further, and no one seems to mind.
When Light Becomes Matter
The afternoon begins in the workshop of Christelle Mahé. For over twenty years, the stained-glass artist has explored the many possibilities offered by glass. Her work moves between heritage restoration and contemporary creation.
Around her, colored panels wait for the light that will bring them to life. Stained glass has this unique ability to transform space. A window becomes a painting, a ray of sunlight becomes color.
In the hands of the artisan, this centuries-old tradition continues to evolve. Heritage is never frozen; it becomes a living material that engages in dialogue with the present.
A World Shaped by the Feminine
A few kilometers away, in Theizé, the workshop of Florence Dussuyer opens onto a deeply personal universe. Her work features female figures, animals, and forms inspired by emotions, dreams, and art history.
Her paintings create a sensitive visual language where human presence, symbolic motifs, and natural elements intertwine. Each canvas becomes an intimate space of expression, where shapes and colors convey emotion more than visible reality.
Theizé, the Quiet Beauty of Beaujolais
Before leaving, one last walk through the streets of Theizé extends this immersion. Like Oingt or Ternand, the village embodies a discreet France that does not seek to impress but to share. A place where people still take time to talk with locals, step into a workshop, or simply pause in front of a landscape.
Travel Less, Feel More
Beaujolais today offers far more than an oenotourism destination. It offers another way of traveling, rooted in proximity, authenticity, and human connection.
Between preserved heritage, passionate artisans, and meaningful encounters, this journey through the Golden Stones reminds us that it is not always necessary to cross the world to feel a sense of wonder. Sometimes, all it takes is to open the door next door.

















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