Delft is the town Vermeer painted, and remarkably, the light he captured still falls the same way on the same canals. The Markt — the central square — is dominated by the Nieuwe Kerk, where the Dutch royal family is buried, and the Stadhuis, a Renaissance town hall that anchors the square with civic dignity. Between them, the weekly market fills the space with flowers, cheese, and stroopwafels, continuing a tradition that predates Vermeer by centuries.
The town’s other claim to fame is Delftware — the blue and white pottery that became a global brand in the seventeenth century when Dutch traders brought Chinese porcelain home and local artisans decided they could do it themselves. The Royal Delft factory, operating since 1653, still produces hand-painted pieces and offers tours of workshops where painters apply the distinctive cobalt designs with single-hair brushes. The Vermeer Centrum traces the artist’s life and techniques in the city he never left, and walking the canals afterward — tree-lined, quiet, dappled with the same silvery light — you understand why leaving never occurred to him.
When to go: April to June for the best light and canal-side cafe weather. August for the Delft Chamber Music Festival in historic venues throughout the old town.