Scapa Flow sits at the heart of Orkney, a sweep of sheltered water that has long held the imagination of sailors, poets and explorers. Framed by low, wind-sculpted islands, it is a place where history and landscape meet: natural harbours and tidal channels, remote beaches and dramatic cliffs, all washed in the shifting light of the northern sky. This travel poster celebrates that meeting - the calm and the story that lies beneath the surface.
For more than a century Scapa Flow has been a stage for human drama. It was the great anchorage of fleets, a strategic harbour in two world wars and the scene of the famous scuttling of the German fleet in 1919. Today those events sit beside quieter traditions: island crofts, coastal communities, and a way of life shaped by wind, tide and season. The poster hints at those layers without telling the whole tale - a silhouette of ships on still water, islands receding into a soft horizon, the memory of masts and hulls preserved in a single moment.
The landscape itself is elemental. Low rolling moors and stony shorelines give way to bright tidal channels and unexpected sandy bays. Seabirds wheel above the water, seals slip through the shallows, and wildflowers edge the paths down to the sea. From viewpoints on Hoy to the little harbours of Flotta and Graemsay, each inlet and headland offers its own quiet revelation. This print captures those moods: the hush of early evening, the weathered colours of peat and stone, and the clear, deep blues of the flow.
Designed in a vintage travel-poster spirit, the artwork uses simplified shapes and broad planes of colour to evoke rather than reproduce. A restrained palette of blues, golds and ochres recalls the late-afternoon light that makes the islands glow; clean, solid forms suggest distant hills and layered shorelines.