Living room with beige armchair, wooden side table with lamp and flower, beige sofa with navy pillow, large windows with blue and gold valances, artwork on walls.
A woman in white clothing and a wide-brimmed hat sitting on a swing hanging from a barn's open door. The barn is weathered wood, surrounded by green trees and grass, with a bright sky in the background.

Two settings. One sensibility. Maine, lived well.

Across both homes, the goal is the same: spaces that feel easy to settle into, thoughtful without being over-designed, and supportive of the way people actually spend time together. It's less about adding more and more about getting the essentials right.

View of a cozy living room with a large window, light blue walls, white trim, a beige sofa with pillows, a round dining table with white chairs, a colorful table lamp, framed artwork on the walls, and a patterned rug on the floor.

The Spaces

Spaces that work the way you want them to

Each home is designed with real use in mind, with enough room to gather, but also enough separation to feel comfortable over longer stays. Living spaces flex throughout the day, from quiet mornings to full evenings, without anyone feeling like they're on top of each other.

A cozy living room with square windows adorned with patterned valances. There are cream-colored sofas with decorative pillows, a black coffee table with a vase of tulips, and two table lamps with white shades. The walls feature abstract paintings, and a beige rug covers the hardwood floor.
Open white kitchen cabinet with shelves holding ceramic pitchers, bowls, plates, a cake stand, a glass jar, and a recipe card, situated above a white countertop and sink.

The Kitchens

Kitchens you'll actually use

We care not just about how kitchens look, but how they function when multiple people are in them at once. Good tools, intuitive layout, enough counter space to make cooking together feel collaborative rather than crowded. Meals are usually where the best parts of a trip happen, and the kitchens are built with that in mind.

White kitchen with a stainless steel Viking stove, white cabinets, a cutting board, knives, a coffee maker, and a patterned rug on wooden floor.
A cozy bedroom with a window that has a view of snow-covered trees outside. The bed is made with white, patterned bedding, and has multiple pillows including a decorative pillow with a floral design. There are two lamps on either side of the bed, with a nightstand on the left side.

Comfort

A neatly made bed with white pillows and bedding, flanked by matching silver bedside lamps on each side, and a large round mirror hanging on the wall behind the bed.

Comfort, simply done

Bedrooms are intentionally simple. Comfortable beds, quality linens, and a sense of quiet at night. It's the part of the stay that tends to matter more once you're actually here, and we've tried to get it right without overcomplicating it.

Outdoor patio area with two lounge chairs, a checkered umbrella, potted plants, a garden, and a house with dark wooden siding and large glass doors.

The Pace

Time, returned to you

A stay here is designed to support a different relationship with the day. Mornings that unfold on their own terms. Time outdoors that doesn't have to be earned. Meals that stretch a little longer than usual. There's no agenda, just space to be somewhere, together, without the feeling that you should be somewhere else.

A white table with a vase of pink tulips, a small wooden tray holding three slices of cake labeled as maple mics, blueberry, and coffee cardamom. There is a coffee mug, a white cloth with blue stripes, and a piece of paper near the tray. The table is on a wooden floor.
A woman with curly hair holding a wide-brimmed hat walks out of a white screened porch with a wooden deck, a chair with a yellow-striped towel, and a garden with bushes.

A Day Here

Mornings tend to start slowly — coffee, a walk, or just time at the table before anything gets decided.

The middle of the day shifts depending on where you are: a drive out to the water, an hour in town, or nothing in particular. Evenings usually find their way back to the house, with a slow, unrushed dinner with those you love.

A cozy fireplace with a fire burning, decorated with ornate brass and iron fire tools, and surrounded by wood and wicker objects.
A woman in a black polka dot dress and beige hat is standing on a small pathway near a wooden gate in a lush, green garden shaded by large trees. Pink flowers are in the foreground, and sunlight filters through the leaves.

Town & Country

Two settings, one sensibility

The Farm and High Street offer different ways into the Midcoast: one more open and removed, the other more connected and walkable. What carries between them is a shared approach to how a stay should feel: unhurried, well-considered, and easy to settle into from the first night.

Sailboats docked in a marina with a town in the background, blue sky, and people on a sailing boat with American flag.
Stacked pancakes on a white plate with syrup being poured from a brown bottle, set on a wooden countertop with a small bowl of blueberries and additional pancakes in the foreground.

The Details

A white display cabinet with glass doors containing amber-colored wine glasses and china plates. To the left, part of a family dining table with wooden chairs is visible. A wall hanging of two hummingbirds and floral design is on the left. To the right, a black wooden chair is placed against the wall near a window with white trim. The room has hardwood flooring and light blue walls.

Considered, not conspicuous

Throughout both homes, details are chosen with care, not to stand out on their own, but to support the overall feeling of the space. It's the accumulation of small decisions that makes a stay feel easy without being able to say exactly why.

White wooden house with two windows, a door, and a vent on the upper part of the house, surrounded by trees and colorful flowers in the foreground, with sunlight and partly cloudy sky.

The Farm in Friendship

Living room with beige sofa, blue pillows, a black coffee table holding a book and a small object, large windows with floral curtains, and a patterned rug on wooden floor.

The House in Camden

Two Ways to Stay

Two homes, one sensibility. The harder question is usually which one to save for next time.

The Farm

For those who want to disappear into eleven acres — a tidal cove at the end of a short path, a wood-fired hot tub, and the particular quiet of a farmhouse that's been standing since 1850.

The House

For those who want the village at their fingertips — harbor light in the morning, the cafés and shops a short walk down High Street, and long evenings by the fire after dinner in town.