Perched on a narrow ledge where cliff meets sea, St Govan's Chapel is a small, unforgettable refuge of history and myth on the Pembrokeshire coast of Wales. This travel poster celebrates that rare mix of rugged landscape and intimate architecture - a chapel carved into the rock, reached by weathered steps, framed by the sweep of the Atlantic and a sky that seems to change by the hour.
The chapel itself whispers stories. Believed to date back many centuries and wrapped in local legend, it has long been a place of quiet pilgrimage and seaside wonder. Folk tales tell of a lone hermit who sheltered in the cleft of the cliff; today visitors still pause at the threshold to listen to the wind and imagine lives folded into these stones. The sense of continuity - of a building that has weathered storms and watched generations come and go - gives the scene its romantic pull.
This poster translates that atmosphere into a timeless visual: clean, simplified forms that echo vintage travel art but with a contemporary calm. Broad planes of colour carry the eye from the deep teal of the sea to the warm ochres and russets of the rock face, while muted greens and soft sky pastels lend balance. The chapel's stone silhouette is treated as a striking focal point, its bellcote and narrow windows suggested with economical detail so the imagination fills the rest.
Compositionally, the winding stair is central to the narrative - a carved route down the cliff that invites the viewer to step into the scene. It suggests movement and discovery: an invitation to walk, to descend, to stand where sea spray cools the skin and gulls thread the wind. The mood is contemplative and adventurous at once; it asks you to remember long days of coastal walking, the hush of dusk and the bright, clean mornings that follow.
Typography and graphic tone play their part, too.