Rathlin Island sits off the County Antrim coast as a small, solitary world of wind and sea. This travel poster celebrates that plea for escape: a place where Atlantic light draws sharp lines across cliffs and coves, and a handful of white cottages cluster beside a modest harbour. There is an immediate sense of history here - a layered past of seafarers, island families and visiting birds - and the image carries that feeling in every simplified shape and shade.
The island's landscape is the poster's true subject: steep headlands tumbling into clear water, gentle folds of pasture, rocky outcrops and pockets of sheltered shoreline. Seabird colonies are a living motif - plunging kittiwakes, fluttering guillemots and the charismatic puffin - and their presence gives the scene a restless, humanless romance. The poster captures the hush between waves and wind, the pause when a ferry slips through the channel and the small drama of life lived close to the sea.
There is a quiet cultural heartbeat beneath the scenery. Rathlin has long been a place of belonging and story-telling, trade and stubborn independence. Generations of islanders have earned a living from the water, tended fields, and kept local traditions alive through conversation, music and hospitality. Visitors are often struck by the island's warm welcome and the sense that time runs at a different pace: boots kicked off on a peat-strewn floor, tea brewed strong, talk of tides and shifting weather.
The poster's aesthetic is deliberately pared-back, borrowing from classic travel art to suggest both nostalgia and immediacy. Clean, graphic shapes reduce cliffs to sweeping curves and fields to layered planes, while a restrained palette evokes that Atlantic light - deep sea blues, pale sky aquamarines, moss and sage greens, ochre highlights and cream borders that feel like sun-washed paper.