Perched above the Estuary of the River Conwy, Conwy Castle stands as one of Wales's most striking medieval fortresses. Built in the 13th century during the reign of Edward I, its towering walls and round keeps cut a dramatic silhouette against the rolling hills of North Wales and the distant peaks of Snowdonia. This travel poster celebrates that rare combination of history and landscape - a place where stonework, sea and sky meet to stir the imagination.
The town of Conwy itself retains a timeless charm: narrow streets, a bustling quay, and the intact town walls that link tower to tower. Small fishing boats bob on the water beneath the castle and the quay cafés spill out onto cobbles. There's a feeling here of lived history, of afternoons spent wandering ramparts and finding a quiet vantage point to watch light shift across the tide. The poster aims to bottle that feeling - the hush of old stones warmed by sunlight, and the quiet thrill of places that have witnessed centuries of lives.
Visually, the print draws on classic travel-poster traditions. Shapes are simplified and confident, with strong silhouettes that let the castle's form speak at a glance. The palette favours warm stone ochres for the castle, deep slate blues for the water and sky, and soft greens for the surrounding banks and hills. Highlights of sunlit cream and a restrained, vintage-inspired colour mix give the whole image a sun-washed, nostalgic quality. The result is both modern and timeless: an image that reads as an invitation to explore, and as an elegant object in its own right.
Typography is purposeful and clean, echoing the geometric clarity of mid-century travel posters. Letters sit bold and steady beneath the scene, a quiet promise of place rather than a shout.