Dirleton Castle stands like a weathered storybook on the gentle coast of East Lothian, close to the village of North Berwick. This travel poster celebrates the castle's ruined silhouette - the ragged battlements, tall chimneys and deep-arched gateways - set against a wide Scottish sky. It invites you to imagine slow, sunlit afternoons exploring ramparts and formal gardens, and to savour the hush of history carried on the sea breeze.
The castle's presence speaks of centuries: a medieval stronghold that has watched shipping lanes and fishing villages, survived storms and seasons, and settled into a quieter life as an evocative ruin. Paths wind through lawns and hedged gardens, where stonework softens with lichen and time. From the vantage of the site you can picture coastal outcrops in the distance and the fields that sweep inland - a landscape that mixes maritime light with the softer greens of rural Scotland.
This poster captures that feeling with a travel-poster aesthetic that is both modern and nostalgic. The composition uses simplified forms and clear planes of colour to reduce the scene to its most memorable elements: the castle's warm sandstone against a cool, expansive sky, the layered greens of lawn and trees, and the cream border that frames the image like a classic mid-century print. A restrained colour palette - sky blues, warm ochres, muted greens and deep shadowed tones - gives the image a calm, timeless quality.
Typography is deliberately bold and elegant, echoing vintage travel prints where place names were invitations. The title lettering at the base reads like a promise: a name to pin on a map in the mind, a place to put on a list. The whole poster leans into a mood of gentle adventure - not the clatter of battle but the hush of discovery, the romance of wandering ruined halls and inhaling salt-tinged air.