Perched on a tiny tidal islet in Loch Laich, near Appin in Argyll, Castle Stalker looks as though it has been lifted from a storybook. This travel poster celebrates that very sense of story: a solitary medieval tower house standing guard over still water, its silhouette softened by the evening light. For centuries the castle has watched the comings and goings of sea and sky, a quiet witness to clan history and coastal life in Scotland.
The poster honours the castle's romantic presence rather than catalogue exact dates or deeds. It invites you to imagine the old ropeways, the rowed boats drawing close, and the hush of early mornings when mist slips across the loch. There is a timelessness to the scene - the sort that makes you want to plan a journey, to stand on the shore and feel the salt wind, to trace the outline of battlements against the horizon. That feeling of possibility is at the heart of this print.
Designed with the classic travel-poster spirit in mind, the artwork uses simplified forms and broad planes of colour to capture the light and mood. A warm, golden palette evokes late-afternoon sun reflected on stone and water, while cool indigo and muted greens shape the distant hills and tidal shore. Soft gradients and layered blocks of tone give depth without fuss, letting the castle's architecture speak for itself. The composition balances the stillness of the loch with the sturdy vertical of the tower, creating a calm, cinematic view that feels both intimate and grand.
Typography is pared back and purposeful, echoing vintage travel posters where lettering provided a promise as much as information. The type sits confidently at the foot of the image, lending a poster-like clarity that makes this piece ideal for display in living rooms, studies and hallways.