Witley Court sits in the gentle folds of the Worcestershire countryside, a place where time feels at once patient and theatrical. Once one of England's grand country houses, its ruined façades and surviving fountains now read like a story in stone - an invitation to imagine carriage drives, garden parties and the hush that follows a long summer afternoon.
Approach Witley Court and you are greeted not by a polished, restored facade but by the romantic poetry of ruin. The great house, much admired in its heyday, was largely destroyed by fire in the 20th century; what remains is an elegant skeleton of archways, terraces and balustrades that frame sweeping lawns and a dramatic fountain. It's easy to picture classical statues catching the sunlight while the distant hills roll on, a landscape that has shaped local life and inspired visitors for generations.
This travel poster celebrates that atmosphere. The artwork reduces complex detail into bold, clean shapes and broad planes of colour - the language of classic travel posters - so the eye rests on composition and mood rather than minutiae. A warm, late-afternoon palette of honeyed golds, terracotta ochres and soft olive greens suggests sunlit stone and well-tended gardens, while dusky blues and muted mauves mark the distant Worcestershire hills. The overall effect is nostalgic without being antique: a contemporary tribute to a timeless place.
Typography is integral to the design. The poster uses a strong, retro-inspired typeface at the base, its weight and spacing echoing the confidence of old tourism posters and adding a reassuring anchor to the image. The lettering's colour picks up the sunlit tones within the scene, tying text and picture into one harmonious whole. Displayed on a wall, the poster reads like an invitation - part announcement, part memory - to step into a quieter, grander England.