








Here's what we were working with - a master bedroom sitting under warm mauve-toned walls and a connected bathroom painted in an outdated pink. Both spaces had good bones. Vaulted ceilings, nice tile work, solid fixtures. But the color was fighting everything in the room. A full repaint was the move.
We started by protecting everything that wasn't getting painted. Floors covered, furniture wrapped in plastic sheeting, fixtures bagged off. That prep work is where a lot of painters cut corners, and it's exactly where the job goes sideways. We don't skip it.
The bedroom got a fresh neutral that works with the natural light coming through those arched windows. Clean, calm, and way easier to build around than what was there before. The vaulted ceiling stayed white, which opens the whole room up. The trim got a fresh coat too - bright white against the new wall color makes everything look sharper and more intentional.
The bathroom got the same attention. Going from that heavy pink to a crisp, lighter neutral completely changed how the space reads. The tile and the chandelier actually get to stand out now instead of competing with the wall color. Little details like that are what interior painting is really about - not just covering the old color, but making the whole room feel more like itself.
When we wrap a job like this, the space should look like we were never there - except for the fresh paint. No tape lines, no drips on the tile, no mess left behind. That's the standard we hold ourselves to on every interior painting job, whether it's one room or a whole house.