Glencoe is one of Scotland's most storied valleys: a place where weathered peaks rise like memories and a narrow road winds through a landscape that feels both ancient and immediate. This travel poster captures that sense of drama and hush - the long, low light that falls across corries and crags, the river threading its way through the glen, and the bold silhouettes of the Three Sisters standing guard over the valley.
The glen's landscape is elemental. Granite and heather, peat and stream, slopes smudged with moss and bracken combine to form a palette of muted ochres, mossy greens and slate blues. In this poster the colours have been distilled into broad, layered shapes that echo traditional travel art: warm mid-tones suggest the touch of autumn; cooler blues and greys push distant ridges back into atmosphere. The composition draws the eye along a meandering path, inviting the viewer to imagine the slow, restorative pace of a Highland walk - the quiet crunch of boots, the sudden openness of a viewpoint, the way light changes from mist to gold.
History and folklore are part of Glencoe's character. The glen's steep-sided valleys have held clans, shepherds and travellers for centuries; stories of Jacobite struggles, clan allegiances and the infamous events of 1692 are woven into the place's identity. Yet Glencoe is also about everyday life in the Highlands: crofts tucked into sheltering hollows, the seasonal rhythms of grazing and harvest, and a stubborn sense of community that survives the most elemental weather. That mix of human scale and wild terrain gives the glen its particular romance - a place where the past is always within sight.
For the adventurous this is a landscape to explore. Hikers find countless ridges and gullies to climb; climbers test themselves on steep faces and buttresses; photographers and painters come for the shifting light.