What We Handle
What's Included in Every Interior Paint Job
A lot of what makes an interior paint job look good — or not — happens before any color goes on the wall. Here's what's standard on our end, whether it is one room or an entire property:
- Floors, furniture and fixtures covered before we start
- Holes, cracks and small drywall damage patched and sanded smooth
- Walls and trim wiped down before paint goes on
- Quality interior paint applied for full and even coverage
- Additional coats where the color or surface calls for it
- Clean, straight lines along ceilings, corners and trim
- Work area cleaned up at the end of each day
Signs It's Time
When It's Time for a Fresh Coat
Sometimes a room does not need new furniture, new flooring or a redesign — it just needs the walls to catch up with everything else. If the paint is making the space feel dated, marked up or unfinished, repainting is usually the simplest way to bring the room back to life.
This is especially true for move-ins, rental turnovers, condos, offices and rooms where old touch-ups no longer blend in. A clean repaint can make the space feel cared for again without turning the project into a major renovation.
- The paint looks dull, scuffed or just old
- Old touch-ups and patch spots do not blend in anymore
- The color does not go with your furniture or the rest of the space
- You just moved into a new place
- You are getting a property ready to list, rent or hand over to a new tenant
- You manage units that need a repaint between leases
- You want the space to feel more put-together without redoing everything