First Light
Take the photo tour.
The property page tells the story. This page is the visual proof: arrival, shared rooms, private rooms, wellness, lower level, and the setting around them.
Browse by space
See the stay by type, not in upload order.
The strongest single-property sites do this as a guided visual tour: show the approach first, then the shared rooms, then the private rooms, then the grounds people are actually booking.
Arrival & Exterior
Start with the approach and the outside impression.
Guests want to orient themselves fast: what the house looks like when they pull in, how private it feels, and what kind of exterior arrival they’re getting.
- Front facade and arrival-side exterior view
- House-and-deck angle that shows scale
- Side elevation and exterior context
- Private property feel before stepping inside
Tap any image to enlarge.
Living Room & Fireplace
Show the rooms people actually use together.
This is where guests decide whether the house feels like a real home or just a place to sleep. Living room, fireplace, and the shared atmosphere matter more than filler detail shots.
- Main-level seating with natural light
- Stone fireplace as the visual anchor
- Entry-to-living-room orientation
- Room-wide views that prove the layout
Tap any image to enlarge.
Kitchen & Dining
Then prove the house is set up for actual meals.
Vacation-rental guests scan kitchens and dining spaces for usability. The goal is not a hundred angles. It is a few clear photos that answer whether the room works.
- Dining table and kitchen shown together
- Prep space, counters, and appliances visible
- Open connection to the main gathering zone
- A room that reads as real-life usable
Tap any image to enlarge.
Wellness Suite
Show the feature most rentals do not have.
The wellness setup is part of the reason to stay here, so it deserves its own category instead of being buried inside a general gallery. The hot-tub patio is visually primary; the sauna and cold dunk are part of the same zone.
- Glass-enclosed hot-tub patio off the living room
- All-season wellness area tied directly to the house
- Sauna and cold-dunk setup in the same recovery zone
- A feature that differentiates the stay, not an afterthought
Tap any image to enlarge.
Bedrooms & Baths
Private rooms should answer layout questions fast.
Guests mainly want to confirm bed setup, bathroom finish, and whether the rooms feel lived in and comfortable. A clean grouped set is more persuasive than scattered bedroom images across the whole page.
- Primary sleeping space and natural light
- Additional bedroom coverage for larger groups
- Bathroom proof shots instead of generic decor
- Three-bath layout represented clearly
Tap any image to enlarge.
Lower Level & Recreation
Make the second level of living space obvious.
One of the strongest things about First Light is that the lower level is not leftover square footage. It functions like a second living environment, which matters for longer stays and larger groups.
- Game room and lower lounge shown as real usable space
- Separate fireplace lounge or hangout area
- Exercise and utility area represented honestly
- Lower level reads as part of the stay, not storage
Tap any image to enlarge.
Grounds & Seasons
Finish with the setting people are really booking.
The emotional close is the mountain setting itself: the private acreage, the ridge view, the wildlife, and the changing seasons. That belongs at the end, after the house has been clearly understood.
- Ridge-facing views and open sky
- Private acreage without visible neighbors
- Seasonal color and winter atmosphere
- The outdoor quiet that separates the stay from the resorts
Tap any image to enlarge.
Arrival & Exterior
Arrival & Exterior
Start with the approach and the outside impression.
Guests want to orient themselves fast: what the house looks like when they pull in, how private it feels, and what kind of exterior arrival they’re getting.
- Front facade and arrival-side exterior view
- House-and-deck angle that shows scale
- Side elevation and exterior context
- Private property feel before stepping inside
Living Room & Fireplace
Living Room & Fireplace
Show the rooms people actually use together.
This is where guests decide whether the house feels like a real home or just a place to sleep. Living room, fireplace, and the shared atmosphere matter more than filler detail shots.
- Main-level seating with natural light
- Stone fireplace as the visual anchor
- Entry-to-living-room orientation
- Room-wide views that prove the layout
Kitchen & Dining
Kitchen & Dining
Then prove the house is set up for actual meals.
Vacation-rental guests scan kitchens and dining spaces for usability. The goal is not a hundred angles. It is a few clear photos that answer whether the room works.
- Dining table and kitchen shown together
- Prep space, counters, and appliances visible
- Open connection to the main gathering zone
- A room that reads as real-life usable
Wellness Suite
Wellness Suite
Show the feature most rentals do not have.
The wellness setup is part of the reason to stay here, so it deserves its own category instead of being buried inside a general gallery. The hot-tub patio is visually primary; the sauna and cold dunk are part of the same zone.
- Glass-enclosed hot-tub patio off the living room
- All-season wellness area tied directly to the house
- Sauna and cold-dunk setup in the same recovery zone
- A feature that differentiates the stay, not an afterthought
Bedrooms & Baths
Bedrooms & Baths
Private rooms should answer layout questions fast.
Guests mainly want to confirm bed setup, bathroom finish, and whether the rooms feel lived in and comfortable. A clean grouped set is more persuasive than scattered bedroom images across the whole page.
- Primary sleeping space and natural light
- Additional bedroom coverage for larger groups
- Bathroom proof shots instead of generic decor
- Three-bath layout represented clearly
Lower Level & Recreation
Lower Level & Recreation
Make the second level of living space obvious.
One of the strongest things about First Light is that the lower level is not leftover square footage. It functions like a second living environment, which matters for longer stays and larger groups.
- Game room and lower lounge shown as real usable space
- Separate fireplace lounge or hangout area
- Exercise and utility area represented honestly
- Lower level reads as part of the stay, not storage
Grounds & Seasons
Grounds & Seasons
Finish with the setting people are really booking.
The emotional close is the mountain setting itself: the private acreage, the ridge view, the wildlife, and the changing seasons. That belongs at the end, after the house has been clearly understood.
- Ridge-facing views and open sky
- Private acreage without visible neighbors
- Seasonal color and winter atmosphere
- The outdoor quiet that separates the stay from the resorts
Book the stay behind the photos.
Choose your dates and we’ll confirm current openings within one business day.