Perched where the River Ness flows into the Moray Firth, Inverness is a place where history and landscape meet in a way that feels quietly epic. This travel poster celebrates that meeting: the castle above the city, the spire of the cathedral, and the glassy river that mirrors the hills and sky. It invites you to imagine early morning mists lifting from cobbled streets, to hear distant bagpipes on a crisp evening, and to set out along lanes that lead into the wild, rolling Highlands of Scotland.
The city has long been a crossroads - Pictish strongholds, Norse traders and later the echoes of Jacobite marches all left their mark. Inverness Castle, a dramatic silhouette on the skyline, anchors the image and offers a gateway into stories of clans and kings. Nearby, the River Ness threads through town, a steady presence that appears in reflections on the poster as a ribbon of calm. From here it's only a short journey to the famous mysteries of Loch Ness, and to heather-clad hills where the horizon seems to go on forever.
This print draws on the romance of travel posters from the golden age of tourism. The art style is pared-back and graphic, emphasising simple shapes and broad planes of colour rather than fine detail. The palette favours muted blues and soft greens for the water and hills, warmed by ochres and sandstone tones for the buildings - colours that capture late-summer light or the honeyed glow of autumn. Clean, confident typography names the place in bold capitals, pairing modern clarity with a hint of nostalgic charm.
The mood is deliberately inviting. Rather than a busy scene, the composition gives the eye room to wander: the river leads you in, the spire points upward, and the castle sits like a promise of discovery. The overall effect is both calm and hopeful - a reminder that travel can be about quiet moments as much as grand sights.