Eltham Palace sits at the intersection of two very English stories: the hush of medieval stone and the bold lines of 20th-century design. Once a royal residence, the site now draws visitors from across the country to wander its gardens, admire the surviving Great Hall and linger in a house where Tudor history meets Art Deco glamour. This travel poster aims to capture that meeting of ages-romantic, confident and made for display.
Step closer and you can almost feel the weight of time. In the centuries when kings and courtiers visited, Eltham occupied a quieter edge of London, a place for retreat, pageantry and green space. Today the palace sits within the Royal Borough of Greenwich in England, an evocative patchwork of lawns, clipped yews and formal terraces. The poster celebrates those grounds as much as the building itself: trimmed hedgerows and long garden walls form a calm foreground, inviting the eye to travel up to the house and into the sky beyond.
The composition leans into vintage travel-poster traditions. Broad, simplified shapes and a restrained palette give the scene immediacy without fuss. Warm ochres, terracotta reds, muted olive greens and pale sky blues suggest late afternoon light, the sort that makes stone glow and casts long, cinematic shadows. Blocks of colour and flattened perspective recall classic railway posters-an approach that feels both nostalgic and modern, perfectly suited to a place where old and new converse.
Typography is deliberately confident and clean. The title at the base sits in a bold, geometric sans-serif, the sort of lettering that once greeted travellers at train stations and ferry terminals. It anchors the image and pays tribute to the poster's travel-industry roots, while the generous white border focuses attention on the artwork like a theatre frame.