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Draw inspiration from these 4 stylish New England inns

Cranberry Meadow Farm in Peterborough, New Hampshire, exemplifies a new lodging trend of redecorating historic buildings with design-forward furnishings. Photo by Jumping Rocks Photography

They’re called “shelter titles”: those magazines, books, and websites devoted to dreamy interiors. If gazing at such contemporary spaces in print or on screen stirs your imagination, consider how inspired you’ll feel at an inn with an aesthetic that’s just as divine.

A new generation of New England inn owners has turned the notion of what a B&B should look like on its head. Even more impressive: They’ve done so within the gracious walls of historic properties.

Design a summer or fall road trip around stays at these enchanting properties to take in some of New England’s most eye-pleasing natural scenes from seacoast to mountains.

With abundant opportunities to shop for home accents and furnishings at leading regional stores, you might also return home with a head full of ideas and a trunk full of goods to refresh your own living space. And a well-rested readiness to tackle the transformation.

Map of designer inns in Maine, New Hampshire, and Massachusetts.

Map by Cynthia Geskes

Jump to: Maine | Massachusetts | New Hampshire

1. The Norumbega

Camden, Maine

Aerial view of The Norumbega and Penobscot Bay.

Overlooking Penobscot Bay in Camden, Maine, The Norumbega underwent an interior redesign in 2022. Photo by Harry & Lyss

Start your journey at Midcoast Maine’s castle by the sea. When architect Will Tims bought this magnificent stone mansion, which has overlooked Penobscot Bay since 1886, the interior hadn’t changed much since its 1984 debut as a B&B.

Tims and his partner, Brett Haynie, immediately saw the makeover potential. After operating the inn “as is” in the fall of 2022, they shut down for a winter of transformation.

What emerged, with assistance from New York City– and Miami-based interior design firm Studio Cake, is an environment that feels vintage and fresh all at once. One where comfort reigns, and guests feel as if they’re in the home of a worldly traveler—like original owner Joseph Stearns—who’s eager to entertain. The Norumbega’s sophisticated cocktail and small plates menus add to that spirit.

The Norumbega bi-level Library Suite, with filled bookshelves overlooking the sleeping area.

The bi-level Library Suite at The Norumbega served as the library for the original owner of the 1896 manor. Photo by Douglas Merriam

Of the inn’s 11 rooms, the most dramatic is the Library Suite, where an English needlepoint screen conceals stairs that lead to the mezzanine’s mahogany library and stained glass window. Turret rooms like Windsor, with a clever wood easel to hold the TV, and Sandringham, with checkered walls and treehouse-like views, absolve you of the pressure to spend your entire stay reading.

 Norumbega Sandringham room seating area.

The second-floor Sandringham room incorporates the home’s turret. Photo by Hannah Hoggatt

“We’re finding that many guests are booking with us because they’re attracted to the décor,” Tims says. He and Haynie delight in watching them discover the inn’s subtle surprises, such as the Showa-period Japanese wall panels in the breakfast room. “It’s a joyful composition featuring 2 roosters that are not fighting one another, which we’ve come to understand is rather unusual.”

Tims also likes Lilies, a large Colin Page painting above the parlor fireplace. “It’s dreamy, nostalgic, and full of innocent fun—just like The Norumbega.” Rates start at $229.

Shop: While you’re in Camden, find a beautifully curated selection of artisan-made home accents at Jessie Tobias Design Shop, and outfit your home (and yourself) in coastal chic style at Motifs.

You may also like: 5 romantic waterfront New England spots, including Camden

2. Blind Tiger Portland

Portland, Maine

The Eight Bells room at Blind Tiger.

The Eight Bells room is a good place to ride out a storm like that pictured in the Winslow Homer painting of the same name. Photo by Read McKendree

In an 81-mile drive south if you take the scenic route, you’ll make this inn-to-inn tour’s lone urban stop. But this is Maine, where even the largest city feels manageable, relaxed, and pulsing with creativity.

Home to the Portland Museum of Art and Maine College of Art & Design with its Institute of Contemporary Art galleries, the city had plenty to inspire decor lovers even before 2020, when Lark Hotels undertook an extensive renovation of the first of 2 homes in the city’s West End. Lark renovated the second in 2023.

Blind Tiger Portland consists of a Federal-style 1823 mansion on Danforth Street and an 1869 Victorian townhouse a short walk away on Carleton Street. What marries them is an interior aesthetic devised by Massachusetts firm Elder & Ash that modernized spaces with moody colors, plush textures, and a mashup of new furnishings and vintage finds.

Each of the 15 guest rooms reflects Portland’s artistic heritage. Eight Bells, for example, pays subtle homage to that Winslow Homer painting. Here, though, leather armchairs and a wood-burning fireplace offer refuge from any storm.

The Event Records room at Blind Tiger.

Also in Blind Tiger Portland’s Danforth Street building, the Event Records room honors a local musician. Photo by Read McKendree

Event Records, a king-bed room with a tile-framed wood-burning fireplace, is a tribute to late local musician Al Hawkes. The Danforth building has a Peloton Studio, open to all guests, but with walkable streets and bike paths beckoning, why stay indoors?

Then again, one of the coolest things about Blind Tiger is how it invites the city in. Locals are welcome to register for workshops or to work or unwind in public spaces, like living and bar rooms where natural woods and botanicals contrast with bold paint colors and abstract art.

You might find your most interesting conversations about decor and design are with new friends, not your travel companion. Rates start at $201 per couple; $50 per additional person. Free parking at the Danforth building; parking is $20 per day at Carleton Street.

Shop: Designer Rachel Ambrose’s 8,000-square-foot showroom, Home Remedies, teems with customizable new and one-of-a-kind vintage treasures, plus everything from linens to lighting, to zhuzh up your home.

You may also like: 8 vegan and vegetarian dining spots, including one in Portland

3. Addison Choate

Rockport, Massachusetts

Addison Choate exterior.

In Rockport, Massachusetts, this 1851 home opened to guests as Addison Choate in 2019. Photo courtesy Addison Choate

If midcentury designers had Instagram, would they have taken their era’s curvy silhouettes, earthy touches, and pops of color to extremes? At this boutique inn on Massachusetts’ North Shore about a 115-mile drive from Portland, it’s easy to imagine the answer is yes.

Marshall and Courtney Tulley opened the property in the summer of 2019. Courtney's playful eye has made the interior of the 1851 Georgian-style home a fun blend of furnishings that feel comfortably familiar—if your grandma’s house was stuck in the ’60s or you grew up watching The Brady Bunch—and wildly contemporary.

You’ll find plenty of backdrops for your own Insta stories, like the old-timey telephone nooks where you can totally imagine Ken waiting by a rotary-dial relic for Barbie to call.

Addison Choate 2-floor Dog Watch suite.

Dog Watch is a 2-floor suite with a full kitchen, pine floors, and 19th-century accents. Photo courtesy Addison Choate

Of the 7 guest rooms here, Dog Watch is the top dog. It’s a 2-story suite with a king bed and full kitchen, perfect for extended stays. But even a quick getaway will reset your biorhythm to coastal calm and your mood to lighthearted. It’s a reminder of how much your surroundings can impact your well-being. Rates start at $203. AAA discount available.

Shop: Bearskin Neck, a short walk or bike ride from the inn, is known for its shops and fine art galleries. If an original canvas that captures Rockport’s luminous light isn’t in your budget, pop into The Pewter Shop—in business for 89 years—to find vibrant accents for at-home entertaining.

You may also like: 7 New England wildlife refuges with gorgeous water views 

4. Cranberry Meadow Farm

Peterborough, New Hampshire

Cranberry Meadow Farm exterior with pool.

In Peterborough, New Hampshire, a chef and her husband renovated a 1797 building and opened Cranberry Meadow Farm in 2020. Photo by Jumping Rocks Photography

Drive about 95 miles inland to New Hampshire’s Monadnock Region, which takes its name from New England’s most-climbed mountain. In less than 2 hours, you’ll be turning between fieldstone posts and arriving at an inn with a history that dates to 1797, but a decor approach that feels completely in step with the needs of 2020s vacationers.

In 2019, chef Carolyn Hough and her husband, Charlie, acquired the original Wilson’s Tavern, which had been a private home since 1834. In October 2020, their first guests arrived at a tranquil haven with gentle colors and soothing textures.

Cranberry Meadow Farm muffins and peaches.

Breakfast receives extra flair from co-owner Carolyn Hough, an internationally experienced chef. Eat in the dining room, your room, or take it to go. Photo by Jumping Rocks Photography

At a time when shops were closed and sourcing was challenging, Carolyn augmented her own possessions with some lucky finds to furnish the inn in a way that feels refreshingly minimalist, inspired, and sustainable.

“I didn’t want anything to be too striking, too loud,” Carolyn says. “You’re able to just be in the space and not be taken over by the space.” There’s nothing to distract guests from views of the pool, gardens, and leafy surroundings. Nothing to pull them out of their own reveries.

Cranberry Meadow Farm Scott room.

The second-floor Scott room features a wide-plank hemlock floor that dates to the building’s original use as a tavern. Photo by Jumping Rocks Photography

Of the 8 rooms, Scott is perhaps the most intriguing. Its hand-hewn moldings and wide-plank hemlock floor date back to when tavern VIPs stayed in this high-ceilinged space.

How clever, though, to see a wasp’s nest on a branch hung like modern art. How luxurious to step into the steam shower before snuggling beneath the king bed’s buttery sheets. How nurturing to wake to the aroma of savory quiche and sweet hand pies, wafting from a bright, windowed kitchen so immaculate and well-designed that it belongs on TV. Rates start at $385.

Shop: At Bowerbird & Friends Antiques in downtown Peterborough, owner Katherine Forrest’s eye for the unusual will spark creative ideas for your own home and garden.

Kim Knox Beckius is Yankee magazine’s travel editor and a co-author of the 2024 edition of Frommer’s New England.

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