Perched above the River Foyle, the Derry Walls stand as a living ribbon of history and invitation. Built in the early 17th century and remarkably intact, these stone ramparts encircle a compact city where every corner seems to hold a story. This travel poster celebrates that timeless romance: the quiet authority of crenellated walls, the curl of distant hills and the gentle shimmer of water that leads the eye toward new discoveries.
Walkers and dreamers have long been drawn to the wall-walk that follows the city's contours. From the broad bastions you can watch light slide across terracotta rooftops, pause over narrow streets lined with Georgian and Victorian façades, and trace the silhouette of St Columb's spire against the sky. There's a sense of adventure here that is intimate rather than grand - a feeling that history is not a distant fact but something you can touch and walk upon.
Northern Ireland's landscape plays its part in this scene. The green folds of countryside beyond the walls soften the stone's austere lines, while the River Foyle adds a cool, reflective counterpoint. In every season the palette shifts: fresh greens and spring blues, the warm ochres of autumn, the clear, crisp light of winter. This poster captures those shifts with a calm, considered palette - deep coastal blues, slate greys and sunlit ochres-inviting the viewer to imagine a golden-hour stroll along the ramparts.
Rendered with a travel-poster sensibility, the design pares detail back to strong shapes and flat planes of colour. That simplicity lends a clarity and warmth: shadows become elegant bands, the sky a series of graduated blues, and the walls themselves read as solid, reassuring forms. Typography sits confidently beneath the image, echoing the poster's vintage roots while keeping a contemporary edge.