First off, come up with a demand.
10 indoor 2 bulb fixtures, with 100w equivalent LED bulbs (14W each bulb) is 280 watts.
Laptop, Tablet, Smartphone charging - Figure on 90 watts for a laptop power supply
Outdoor light - Guess on 2 14w bulbs - 28W
Now, add time into the mix.
Indoor lights, figure 5 hours per day - 1400W (280*5)
Laptop, figure the same 5 hours - 450W (90*5)
Outdoor lights, use a photosensitive fixture to conserve engery - 15 hours (worst case in the winter) - 420W (28*15)
Total watt hours you need: 2270W/H per day (assuming this happens every day, unlikely, but plan for the worst).
Now, divide that by the number of hours of sun you get (again worst case). A safe bet for CO is 4 Hours.
2270/4=567.5 watts of solar. Now, I would upsize that by ~50% so that you are able to recover from a cloudy day.
That gives you ~900 watts of panels. In the solar thread I linked a site where 900w of panels is $750, before shipping. There are better prices out there, but they're an easy site to quote prices from.
Now, you have to decide what voltage you want to run the battery bank at, and I would recommend 24VDC or 48VDC. It means more batteries (more money), but it's better from a current draw standpoint.
2270w at 24VDC, gives you 94.5A/H required. That's what the listed devices above will use in a day.
For battery health, you never want to exceed 50% discharge, and staying at 40% discharge or less is better.
So miniumum, you need 200A/H of batteries to support your usage.
I would also suggest that your battery bank be able to run the required items for 2-3 days. Now you're at 400-600A/H.
A good go to for batteries, that I have used extensively, is a 6V 215AH golf cart battery.
https://www.batteriesplus.com/productdetails/sligc110
They handle charge/discharge very well.
So, at 6V you need 4 in series to get 24VDC.
That means 8-12 batteries, so $800-1200 in batteries.
A charge controller and a inverter will also be required. For what you are building, I wouldn't bother with higher end solar gear. It's not necessary.
Low Cost MPPT:
https://www.ebay.com/itm/4215BN-Trac...53.m1438.l2649
Low Cost Pure Sine Inverter:
https://www.ebay.com/itm/2500W-DC-to...sAAOSw~bFWQaBA
MPPT: $260
Inverter: $240
So, Grand total, minus wiring, boxes, etc, is $2450 for 900 watts of panels, 3 days worth of batteries, and a relatively well liked solar controller and inverter.
It's an overbuilt off grid system, but it will work well for what you want.