Perched where the Falls of Dochart tumble through a compact, honey-toned village, Killin feels like a page from a travel journal. This poster captures that rare combination of water, stone and hill that defines so much of Scotland's appeal: a rushing river framed by an elegant arched bridge, cottages tucked into the slope and the distant sweep of Trossachs hills rising in layered greens.
Walks along the river reveal why this place has attracted visitors for generations. The falls themselves are alive with sound and motion, a natural stage where light and shadow play on rock and spray. Beyond the village, paths climb into moor and mountain, where the slopes of Ben Lawers and the shores of Loch Tay offer open air and wide views. It's a landscape for exploration - easy rambles, longer hill days and quiet evenings spent in a pub with a view of the hills.
Killin's story is woven from stone and water. Ancient routes and local traditions linger in the layout of lanes and the shape of houses; clan stories and riverside legends give the place a human scale. There's a simple, genuine hospitality here - shops, craft stalls and cafés that feel lived-in rather than staged. It's the kind of village that invites lingering: to listen, to look and to return having found something small and true.
This travel poster honours that atmosphere in a pared-back, vintage style. Broad, clean shapes and a restrained palette of muted greens, slate blues, warm sandstone and cream evoke the calm, weathered tones of the Highlands while keeping the composition fresh and modern. The stone bridge and tumbling water are rendered with confident, simplified forms that celebrate structure and motion rather than photographic detail. The result is a scene that reads equally well from across the room or close up - a bold statement with the gentleness of a memory.