The Cedar Peak Hideaway
This cabin doesn’t play around. It’s a clean, sharp A-frame-inspired structure dropped right in the middle of a forest that looks almost staged. The cedar siding catches the sunlight like it’s showing off, and the dark trim gives it just enough edge to avoid looking like every other cookie-cutter micro-cabin you see on Instagram.

What makes this place hit harder than most tiny homes is the proportion. That raised deck is large enough to actually use—not just pretend to use for photos. The dining setup outside isn’t just decorative either; it’s clearly made for real dinners, real gatherings, real mornings with coffee and cold air.


The roofline is doing a lot of heavy lifting here. The steep angle, paired with that upper window span, pulls in light like a magnet. It tells you one thing immediately: the inside is brighter than you’d expect for a compact footprint. If you’re trying to capture a modern cabin feel without going full luxury-lodge, this is the formula.

Placement matters, and this cabin is parked in a clearing that’s actually smart. Enough trees to immerse you, enough open sky to not feel suffocated. Mountains in the back add depth to the scene, and—let’s be honest—they make the whole place feel more expensive.

All in all, it’s a strong design: simple, intentional, and not pretending to be anything it isn’t. No wasted shapes, no gimmicks. Just a solid retreat built for people who want nature without sacrificing structure or style. If you’re planning content for your tiny-home brand, this one doesn’t need a filter—it already does the heavy lifting.

Location: @ramblinroseindex
📷: @levimkelly