Perched above a graceful bend in the River Swale, Richmond Castle has watched over the Yorkshire landscape since the years after the Norman Conquest. This travel poster celebrates that long view: the keep, the curtain walls and the gentle sweep of fields beyond are rendered as an invitation to wander. It speaks of history without heaviness and of landscape as an open, hospitable place.
Richmond itself is a compact market town that has grown beneath the castle's shadow. Cobbled streets, Georgian stone houses and riverside paths create a setting where every corner feels like a discovery. The castle's medieval origins and later uses as a county gaol and landmark give it a layered story, one that the poster hints at through composition rather than detail. This is the romance of the north of England distilled - a place where past and present sit comfortably together, and where a riverside walk can feel like stepping back in time.
Visually, the poster embraces the classic travel-poster aesthetic: simplified shapes, clean lines and a considered palette. Warm, sunlit ochres and soft sandstone tones suggest the castle's stone at golden hour, while cool river blues and muted greens balance the scene and guide the eye along the river's curve. The hills recede in lilac and slate, lending depth without fuss. The result is an image that reads easily from a distance yet rewards a closer look with its subtle layering of colour and form.
Typography is part of the mood here - bold, elegant lettering anchors the composition and echoes the confidence of old travel advertising. The type sits quietly beneath the picture, offering the place name and country with a vintage, welcoming cadence that pairs well with both modern and traditional interiors. The border and layout mirror a poster from a bygone era, capturing a sense of nostalgia while remaining fresh and contemporary.