Portmeirion is one of Britain's most beguiling villages - a small, Italianate haven tucked into the rugged coast of North Wales. Begun in the 1920s by Sir Clough Williams-Ellis, the village was designed as a colourful, theatrical escape from ordinary life: terraces and piazzas step down to the sea, a domed pavilion and bell tower punctuate the skyline, and winding alleys reveal secret gardens and unexpected viewpoints. The result is a place that feels like a Mediterranean dream on a Welsh estuary, where the Dwyryd and the Cambrian hills meet salt air and long evening light.
This travel poster celebrates that singular atmosphere. It pares the scene back to broad, sunlit planes and elegant geometry, translating Portmeirion's eclectic architecture into a simplified, vintage-inspired composition. Soft gradients capture the afternoon glow; a warm palette of ochres, terracotta and olive sits against sea-glass blues and muted greens. The typography borrows the classic travel-poster rhythm - a bold headline, friendly proportions, and a restrained layout - to evoke the optimism of leisurely journeys and seaside promenades.
The print invites you to wander. Imagine strolling from the piazza toward the beach, the hush of clipped hedges and the distant chime of a bell. The buildings, though stylised here, keep their character: painted facades, arched loggias, and rooftop chimneys. Beyond them the coastline unfurls in curving bays and rocky outcrops, while woodland slopes soften the horizon. That mix of cultivated design and wild landscape is at the heart of Portmeirion's romance: it's a place to linger, to get gently lost, to stand at a balcony and watch the light change over the water.
There is also a playful streak to the village's story.