
Turn a prompt or reference image into an editable travel poster, with vintage, retro, or modern styles shaped around your idea.



Choose a vintage tourism, beach vacation, city tour, or outdoor trip style that fits your destination and audience.




Vintage Tourism
Vacation Posters
City & NatureEnter the destination, headline, season, and mood. Add a landmark or reference image so AI can shape the scene, colors, and style.

Pick a tourism, beach, city, or outdoor style. AI uses it to guide the poster layout, typography, color mood, and illustration direction.

Adjust the destination name, slogan, colors, layout, and spacing, then export as PDF, PNG, or JPG for print posters, social media posts, paid ads, or web use.


Start with a destination, headline, and reference image. Designkit identifies the main visual focus and builds the supporting text around it, giving you a complete travel poster draft instead of separate elements that still need manual arrangement.

Designkit keeps the selected vintage direction consistent across the illustration, lettering, spacing, and composition. Each element follows the same period reference, producing a poster that feels designed as a whole rather than decorated afterward.

Destination names, dates, prices, and campaign copy are placed in a clear reading order instead of competing for attention. Designkit keeps the headline prominent, gives supporting details enough space, and preserves the artwork as the main focus.

Keep the main artwork and headline relationship as the design moves into a new size. Designkit reorganizes the composition for each format, so print and digital versions stay visually connected instead of feeling like separate posters.







Yes. Choose a vintage or retro direction and describe the destination, era, landmark, and mood. Those details guide the illustration style, typography, color treatment, and composition, so the result follows a consistent period look.
Yes. Travel poster concepts can support tourism promotions, hotel marketing, tour campaigns, and destination advertising. Review your current Designkit plan and export terms before publishing final designs in commercial placements.
Include the destination, headline, landmark, season, mood, and preferred style. Add a reference image when the location or visual direction needs to be more specific. Clear input helps the generator decide what should lead the composition and where the campaign text belongs.
The quality depends on the clarity of the prompt and reference material. A focused destination, visual direction, and headline give the generator a stronger base for the composition. You can then refine the text, colors, spacing, and layout before export.
Yes. Travel posters can be exported as JPG files. Adjust the size and layout before download so the same design direction can work across print and digital placements without rebuilding the poster from the beginning.
Start free and produce a polished travel poster you can review, adjust, and prepare for your next destination campaign.
What Travel Marketers and Tourism Teams Say About Designkit
Used by travel marketers, tourism boards, hotels, and tour agencies to create destination poster campaigns.
Our Tour Posters Finally Look Consistent
We promote several local tours every month, and each one used to look like a separate design project. Now we can keep the same vintage travel style while changing the destination, route, and headline.
Great for Seasonal Vacation Campaigns
I used it for summer vacation posters and then reused the same direction for winter trips. The posters looked connected, but not copied, which made the campaign feel much more organized.
Helpful When the Destination Has No New Photos
Some smaller locations do not have strong campaign images ready. Starting from landmarks, colors, and destination details gave us poster ideas we could edit before sending to the team.
Better Drafts Before Designer Review
We still polish important campaign visuals with our designer, but Designkit helps us walk into review with several clear directions. It cuts down the vague “make it more vintage” feedback loop.
Good for Social and Print Versions
The same poster idea worked for a printed lobby sign, an Instagram post, and a small web banner after resizing. We only adjusted spacing and text placement instead of rebuilding the design, which saved us a lot of small layout fixes during the final campaign week.