Create a 1970s-inspired luxury travel advertisement for a fictional Mediterranean hotel called "Hotel Aurelia Mare".
The final image should feel like a beautifully art-directed vintage print advertisement from an upscale international travel magazine, created in the late 1970s. It should combine sun-faded glamour, nostalgic sophistication, and elegant old-world luxury. The setting is a breathtaking seaside hotel terrace on the Mediterranean at golden hour, with warm peach light, deep blue sea beyond, striped loungers, white stone architecture, tall glass doors, soft linen curtains moving in the breeze, potted citrus trees, and a refined sense of summer wealth and escape.
The composition should feel like a true vintage luxury travel ad: cinematic but clean, with strong layout, intentional negative space, and elegant editorial balance. The scene should include one stylish woman in oversized sunglasses and a flowing cream silk dress seated at a small terrace table with a glass of sparkling water and a folded newspaper, looking out toward the sea. She should feel poised, glamorous, relaxed, and timeless, like a symbol of aspirational travel rather than a fashion model posing for camera.
The color treatment is essential: slightly sun-faded, warm, nostalgic, rich but softened, with tones of cream, terracotta, sea blue, pale gold, faded coral, and warm white. The image should feel like a premium archival print advertisement that has aged beautifully.
Add elegant, fully readable 1970s-style advertisement typography directly into the composition. The layout should feel authentic to a luxury travel print ad from that era, with tasteful hierarchy and confident spacing. Use this exact text:
Top small line:
"THIS SEASON, ESCAPE BEAUTIFULLY"
Main headline:
"HOTEL
AURELIA MARE"
Secondary line:
"The Mediterranean, as it was meant to be."
Lower body line:
"Private terraces, sea air, long lunches, and a quieter kind of luxury."
Bottom line:
"Now accepting summer reservations"
Typography should feel period-correct, stylish, and fully integrated into the design — elegant serif for the hotel name, refined supporting text, no modern tech-brand feel. The final image should look like a collectible vintage travel ad: glamorous, nostalgic, luxurious, editorial, and unforgettable.
No random extra text, no spelling mistakes, no cartoon style, no cheap retro filter, no clutter, no meme aesthetic. Keep it authentic, print-like, art directed, and beautifully composed.