Bodnant Garden sits like a secret tucked into the green folds of North Wales, where terraced lawns give way to a wooded valley and distant hills. This travel poster celebrates that quiet splendour - the celebrated golden laburnum arch framing a handsome stone house, pathways leading inward and the open sky above. It is an invitation to wander and to linger.
The garden's story belongs to long afternoons, careful planting and generations of care. Established in the later nineteenth century and tended across decades, Bodnant has become a place of curated contrasts: formal terraces beside wild, tree-filled slopes, rare specimen trees set against familiar hedgerows, and seasonal explosions of colour that reward visiting across the year. In spring the slopes are carpeted with early blooms; in summer the terraces hold their poise, and on misty autumn mornings the whole scene reads like a page from a travel diary.
Beyond the plants, Bodnant speaks of Wales - of gentle climate, shifting light and a landscape that rises and falls toward distant mountains. The garden is a meeting point between human design and the natural sweep of the valley, where stone steps, clipped edges and urns sit comfortably with ancient trees and winding paths. It is a place for lovers of botany, for picnics beneath arching branches, and for quiet discoveries around every corner.
Rendered in the unmistakable language of a classic travel poster, this print uses simplified forms and bold colour blocks to capture the garden's romance. The composition centres the laburnum arch as a visual gateway: yellow pendulous blooms draw the eye, framing the pathway that leads the viewer into the scene. A restrained palette of sky blues, sage and olive greens, warm sandstone and a hint of terracotta for rooftops evokes sunlit clarity without losing the softness of the Welsh light.