The Malvern Hills have long been a quiet sort of magic on the edge of England's Midlands: a chain of ancient ridges that rise from the patchwork of fields and villages to offer clear air, long views and a sense of escape. This travel poster celebrates that feeling - the slow, steady rhythm of a walk under an open sky, the amber of late sun on bracken and the patient shapes of hills that have watched centuries of weather pass by.
These hills are older than most stories you'll hear there. Formed from some of Britain's oldest rocks, the ridge crests are crowned by peaks such as the Worcestershire Beacon and marked by traces of Iron Age earthworks. Nearby Great Malvern grew as a spa town drawn to the celebrated spring water; its Victorian bandstands, steep lanes and the gothic silhouette of the priory add a human history that feels comfortably stitched to the landscape. Composers, walkers and spa visitors have all been tempted to linger here - and the poster aims to bottle that unmistakable invitation to stay a while.
Walking the Malvern Hills is a small, persistent adventure. The paths curve and fold into hidden hollows; bridleways sweep across the slopes; and from nearly every rise you can see fields and hedgerows falling away towards the Severn Vale or the distant Cotswolds. Spring brings a carpet of wildflowers and the buzz of insects; autumn turns the hills to a mosaic of burnt gold and russet; winter mornings sometimes hang a pale mist in the valleys while the ridges catch the sun. It's a place for picnics, for quiet conversation, for setting out with a rucksack and returning hours later with pockets full of clover and a head full of sky.
This poster channels that experience in a pared-back, vintage-inspired style. Shapes are simplified and layered to follow the eye along a winding country lane into the distance.