Perched at the eastern end of Edinburgh's Royal Mile, Holyrood Palace is where history and landscape meet in a way only Scotland can deliver. This travel poster celebrates that meeting: the stately sandstone of a royal residence set against the wild, rounded slopes of Arthur's Seat and the sweeping greens of Holyrood Park. It's an invitation to step back into a narrative of pageantry, romance and rugged natural beauty.
Holyrood Palace has been at the centre of Scotland's story for centuries. From medieval abbey foundations to its role as the official royal residence in Scotland, the palace has seen coronations, courtly ceremonies and the fleeting drama of Mary, Queen of Scots. The worn stones and carved doorways hint at whispered councils and candlelit banquets, while the neighbouring ruins of Holyrood Abbey add a romantic, melancholy edge - a reminder of time's passage written into the very fabric of the city.
Beyond the palace walls, the landscape rises. Arthur's Seat and the ridges of Holyrood Park form a green amphitheatre around the city, offering wild walks and panoramic views that contrast beautifully with the palace's formal symmetry. That contrast - ordered architecture beside untamed hill - is at the heart of Edinburgh's charm and the poster's appeal. It speaks of morning light on carved cornices, of footsteps on gravel, of afternoons spent wandering between history and horizon.
Rendered in a travel-poster style, the print simplifies and celebrates these elements. The colour palette favours warm sandstone ochres and soft greys for the palace, balanced by layered greens and mauve-shadowed slopes for the park and distant crags. A pale, luminous sky lends the whole scene a clear, uplifting mood: the kind of day that invites exploration.