








When a home has this many rooms - living spaces, bedrooms, bathrooms, hallways, a kitchen - getting the color and finish right across all of them is not a small task. Every room has its own lighting, its own trim details, its own personality. What looks great in one space can fall flat in another. That's exactly the kind of job that separates a careful, skilled painter from someone who just rolls and goes.
For this Grosse Pointe Woods home, we did a full interior repaint using Benjamin Moore paint throughout. We chose Benjamin Moore for a simple reason - the coverage holds up, the color stays true, and the finish looks just as good two years from now as it does on day one. That matters a lot in a lived-in home where walls take daily wear.
The scope here was significant. Bedrooms, hallways, the main living area with its detailed crown molding, the kitchen, a full bathroom with its own distinct color - each space got individual attention. Trim, doors, and walls all had to work together. Getting clean lines where the wall color meets the trim and ceiling is one of those things that looks easy when it's done right and painfully obvious when it isn't.
This is the kind of whole-home interior painting work we do regularly. It's detailed, it requires planning, and it takes patience to move through a fully furnished house without cutting corners. The result is a clean, cohesive look from the front door all the way through to the back of the house - every room feeling fresh without feeling disconnected from the rest.
If your home is sitting on colors that feel dated or walls that have just taken too much wear over the years, a full repaint with the right product makes a bigger difference than most people expect. High-end paint like Benjamin Moore is part of that - but so is the prep work, the technique, and knowing when to slow down and do it right.