Perched on a steep, grassy crag above the Dee Valley, Dinas Bran has long held a place in the imagination - a ruined stronghold that reads like a chapter from a Welsh romance. This travel poster celebrates that feeling: the slow fall of evening across rolling fields, the silhouette of battlements against a pastel sky, and the sense of stories waiting beneath the stone.
The castle itself is a ruin, its broken walls and towers a record of centuries. Built and rebuilt through medieval times, Dinas Bran has watched over the landscape for generations, a sentinel above the winding River Dee and the market town of Llangollen. Walkers who follow the ridge will find panoramic views across the Vale of Clwyd and the hills beyond, while the surrounding lanes and hedgerows carry the quiet rhythms of rural Wales. The site is as much about atmosphere as architecture: the interplay of light on rough stone, the sudden rush of wind across the moor, the long sightlines out to distant ridges.
This poster draws on that atmosphere with an artful, pared-back approach. Shapes are simplified and layered to suggest depth without clutter; fields become broad swathes of green and ochre, distant hills melt into soft blues and mauves, and the castle is reduced to its telling outline. The colour palette favours warm late-afternoon tones - golden ochres, mossy greens and muted terracotta - balanced by cool greys and a creamy sky. The result is a nostalgic, slightly vintage mood that feels at once timeless and contemporary.
Typography plays its part too. A bold, clean sans-serif anchors the lower edge of the print, the place name set in confident capitals that echo classic travel posters from the early 20th century. The lettering is deliberately simple so it reads as part of the composition, never overpowering the landscape.