Residential painting should be practical, clean, and durable.
A residential exterior paint project needs to fit the home, not just the paint can. The right scope depends on material condition, age of the existing finish, sun exposure, shade, moisture, and how the rest of the exterior is performing.
For Woodstock homeowners, that often means reviewing trim, siding, fascia, roof-edge details, gutters, porch areas, and color coordination before work starts.
Painting after repairs
Residential painting often follows siding repair, fascia repair, gutter replacement, or roof-edge work. Sequencing matters so new paint is not damaged by another trade right after it is installed.
When Rhino is handling multiple exterior items, we can plan the order so repair, prep, primer, and finish coats make sense together.
A written scope keeps the project clear
The quote should explain which surfaces are included, which repairs are needed, how surfaces will be prepared, what colors are approved, and what finish products will be used.




