Perched on a rugged islet off Holy Island, South Stack Lighthouse stands as one of Wales's most evocative coastal landmarks. This travel poster celebrates the meeting of sea and stone: the narrow causeway and suspension bridge, the spiral of steep steps, and the white tower that has guided mariners for more than two centuries. It's a place of salt wind, seabird colonies and a quiet, old-fashioned kind of industry that belongs as much to local memory as to the map.
The cliffs around South Stack are dramatic in scale and texture - sheer faces worn by Atlantic swell, grassy ledges that catch the light, and in spring and summer the colony noises of guillemots, razorbills and puffins. Walkers come for the height, the views across St George's Channel and the sense of remoteness achieved after only a short, sharp descent. For generations the lighthouse has been a symbol of safety and endurance, part of Wales's long maritime story of fishing ports, pilots and coastal rescue. Tales of shipwrecks and brave rescues linger in the local imagination, adding an element of romance and danger to every horizon.
This print is composed in the style of classic travel posters, where form and colour tell a simple, unforgettable story. The artwork reduces the landscape to bold planes and sweeping curves - cliffs become warm ochres and terracottas, sea becomes layered blues and teal, and the sky drifts in soft apricot and slate. The lighthouse's red band and white tower provide a focal point, a beacon against the vastness of ocean and sky. Typography is confident and pared-back, drawing on mid-century travel ephemera with tall, friendly lettering that anchors the composition without crowding it.
The palette is deliberately romantic: sun-washed golds and muted coral meet deep sea greens and vintage navy, creating a mood that is at once nostalgic and alive.