








When a house is mid-renovation, the painting phase is one of the most important steps to get right. Everything else - the floors, the fixtures, the finish work - will be judged against the walls. Get the paint wrong, and even a nice renovation looks cheap. Get it right, and the whole space comes together.
This one covered the full interior - ceilings, walls, trim, and doors throughout multiple rooms. That kind of scope takes coordination. You have to work in the right order, protect what's already been done, and keep clean lines even when other trades have been in and out of the space. It's not glamorous work, but it's exacting.
The color choices here were intentional - cool, neutral grays that work with natural light and give the space a calm, cohesive feel from room to room. The living areas, bedrooms, and even the small angled bathroom upstairs all got the same level of attention. Nothing was rushed to hit a deadline at the expense of quality.
One thing people underestimate about painting a renovation is the prep. Surfaces aren't always flat or clean when you're working alongside other contractors. Knowing how to deal with that - patching, priming, cutting in around rough edges - is what separates a paint job that holds up from one that starts showing problems in a year. We take that part seriously on every job.
A fresh coat of paint is almost always one of the last things done in a renovation, but it's what people see first when they walk in the door. This home is getting close to the finish line, and the paint work is ready for whatever comes next.