What's Included
🖌️ Walls & Ceilings
Full rooms or single accent walls, flat or textured surfaces, with proper patching and priming before color goes on.
🖌️ Trim & Baseboards
Crisp, clean lines along baseboards, window casings, and door frames — the detail work that makes a room look professionally finished.
🖌️ Interior Doors
Smooth, even coverage on doors that get touched daily, with attention to edges and hardware.
🖌️ Cabinetry-Adjacent Walls & Trim
Kitchen and bathroom wall painting around fixed cabinetry, with careful masking to protect surfaces you're not painting.
🖌️ Multi-Room & Whole-Home Projects
Coordinated color schemes and efficient scheduling across multiple rooms, minimizing disruption to your household.
🖌️ Color Consultation
Guidance on color selection, sheen level (matte, eggshell, satin, semi-gloss), and what works for each room's lighting and use.
Why a Local Spokane Crew Matters
Spokane's housing stock spans more building eras than most mid-sized cities — early-1900s plaster-and-lath construction throughout Browne's Addition and parts of South Hill, mid-century drywall in the post-war neighborhoods of North Spokane, and contemporary construction in newer Spokane Valley and Liberty Lake developments. Plaster walls accept paint differently than drywall: they're often slightly textured, can have hairline cracking from a century of settling, and sometimes need a different primer approach than a smooth drywall surface. A crew that's worked across this range knows which approach a given wall actually needs rather than treating every interior the same way.
Spokane's dry climate also plays a role indoors. Low ambient humidity for much of the year means paint can dry faster on the surface than it cures underneath if application technique isn't adjusted — this matters most with faster-drying modern low-VOC formulas, where rushing a second coat before the first has properly cured can trap moisture and lead to early failure. We pace interior projects with this in mind, particularly during Spokane's driest summer stretches.
Finally, many Spokane interiors include rooms with strong seasonal light exposure — south-facing living rooms that get intense winter sun low on the horizon, or north-facing rooms that stay cool and shadowed most of the year. Paint color and sheen read differently under these conditions than they do in a paint store's showroom lighting. Part of what a local crew brings to a color consultation is firsthand familiarity with how popular choices have actually looked in Spokane homes with similar light exposure — not just a swatch under fluorescent light.