Boutique
Wikipedia says it best, a boutique hotel, also known as "design hotels" or "lifestyle hotels", is considered intimate and usually luxurious or quirky. By definition, a Boutique hotel is not a chain and excels in providing a personalized level of accommodation and service.
Classic Traditional
Like the warm and soothing notes of John William’s classical guitar, Blissport's Classic Traditional properties offer the comforting elegance of grander times. This is probably where you'll find most of the Ritz Carlton properties. Based on styling from the 18th and 19th centuries, the Classic Traditional style enjoys a long history of survival. Like a Tiffany’s diamond, Classic Traditional tells her you care enough to spend the very most.
Earthy Elegant
Think soft hues of warm earthly colours, refined woodwork, sumptuous fabrics, elegant furnishings and luxury bedding. This style applies equally to resorts such as the award winning Four Seasons Costa Rica at Peninsula Papagaya or the luxury safari camps of Africa.
Grand Luxury
This is the over-the-top category for the best of the best and a price tag to go with it. Think marble walls, leather floors, and tiger wood. This is not a category for environmentalist but it is your cup of tea if her diamond cost as much as a luxury sedan.
Modern Flare
Modern Flare means new, edgy, hip, light and clean but not too trendy, we have another category for that. Modern Flare includes Blissport honeymoon properties in a wide range of prices.
Old World Charm
Old World Charm will characterize properties from the colonial villages of Mexico with cobblestone streets amongst volcanic peaks to the fragrant walled gardens, rolling fields, narrow cobblestone streets, fresh pasta, and vintage wine of Tuscany. These properties are appointed with leaded art and glass, narrow ledges of layered stone, mottled tiles, forged iron hinges, color plastered walls and textures surfaces, foot-worn stone-paved paths with potted lemon tress, antique bricks in walls of limestone, and arched windows, to name just a few.
Practical
While we cannot rave about the architecture or appointments of these properties, Blissport's Practical honeymoons are either in or on route to premier honeymoon locations with good amenities offering great value for your money. Some of our Practical properties are condos or town homes that offer the luxury of cooking or grilling in, others are facilities offered in or near National Parks, attractions, and airports.
Private Seclusion
Cacoon anyone? Choose this one carefully guys. Private Seclusion sounds great right now because you want to take her away from it all and have her completely to yourself. It may also mean isolation at the resort or room and a complete reliance on the service and facilities. Make sure you really plan to spend the honeymoon in the private seclusion of the resort... and your room for days on end.
Rustic Charming
Properties made and appointed with rough or unfinished wood and materials. Examples include lodges, cabins, and log cabins. These properties are not necessarily rural but evoke rural surroundings and country living.
Swinging Hammock Soul
Nothing says Swinging Hammock Soul like the Haciendas and bugalows of Latin and Central America. Locally owned places where backpackers engender a cool mellow vibe, these properties may be registered as historic landmarks or built of simple concrete and natural construction. But in each case, these are laidback properties for the traveler that prefers a back pack to a suitcase.
Trendy
This is where you'll find all of the W Hotel properties a few other jewels we've identified around the world you won't easily find. Blissport's Trendy properties are characterized by a modern theme and happenin' atmosphere and include a wide range of prices.
Tropical Madness
These are the properties between the Tropic of Cancer and the Tropic of Capricorn and few that do a great job of pretenting. To get a sense of the Tropical Madness style just image youself drinking an ice cold beer, identity unknown, in a palapa bar on the sand at sunset.


