1. PPE – Safety on the Jobsite
A lot of new painters think PPE is “overkill” for house painting. The reality? It only takes one splash of paint in your eye or a day of breathing in sanding dust to wish you’d worn it.
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Safety Glasses – Tiny paint flecks can shoot off a roller and into your eyes, especially when rolling ceilings.
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Dust Mask or Respirator – Even water-based paint gives off fumes in enclosed rooms. A mask is non-negotiable when sanding.
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Gloves – Not just for keeping hands clean — latex and nitrile gloves also protect you from paint additives that can irritate skin.
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Knee Pads – If you think you won’t need them, wait until you’ve cut in baseboards for 8 hours straight. Your knees will tell you otherwise.
2. Brushes – Types, Sizes, and Uses
Brushes are the scalpel of a painter — they control the detail work. Using the wrong brush is like using a butter knife to do surgery.
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Angled Sash Brush – The workhorse for cutting in along ceilings, trim, and corners. The angled edge lets you steer the paint exactly where it needs to go without overlapping.
Example: When cutting in at a ceiling, hold the angled edge toward the ceiling line to guide a clean, straight pass. -
Flat Brush – Ideal for flat edges and wide trim. Produces smoother coverage on large, straight areas.
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Common Mistake: Loading too much paint on the brush — it drips, creates heavy edges, and wastes paint. Dip only a third of the bristles into the paint, then tap off the excess.
3. Rollers – Frame Sizes, Cover Nap Lengths, and When to Use Each
Rollers handle coverage. The wrong roller can ruin a job with texture or lap marks.
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Frame Size: Standard 9-inch rollers cover walls quickly. Mini rollers (4–6 inches) are for narrow areas and behind fixtures.
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Nap Length:
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⅜” – Smooth walls and ceilings (most interior jobs).
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½” – Light texture or slightly rough walls.
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¾” – Rougher exteriors, but rarely used indoors.
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Pro Tip: Always “load and roll” in the tray until the roller is evenly coated — no heavy spots. Start your first stroke in the middle of the wall and work outwards to avoid thick roller marks.
4. Other Essential Tools and Why They Matter
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Extension Poles: Not just for height — they keep you at the right angle, reduce fatigue, and speed up ceilings and tall walls.
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Paint Trays & Liners: Liners save cleanup time and keep colors from mixing between jobs.
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Drop Cloths: Canvas drop cloths won’t slip under your feet like plastic can. Use plastic to wrap furniture, but never as your main floor protection.
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Painter’s Tape: Your safety net for sharp lines. Press it down firmly — “floaty” tape edges cause bleed-through, which takes longer to fix than doing it right the first time.
5. Paint Types & Finishes — Matching the Right Finish to the Room
Choosing the wrong finish can make a wall look cheap, no matter how well you applied it.
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Flat/Matte: Hides imperfections but marks easily — perfect for ceilings.
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Eggshell: Most popular for living rooms and bedrooms — a subtle sheen and wipeable surface.
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Satin: Adds durability for hallways, kitchens, and bathrooms.
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Semi-Gloss: Hard, shiny, easy to clean — ideal for trim, doors, and baseboards.
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Gloss: Rare for walls, mostly for decorative finishes.
Example: Painting a hallway with flat paint means every fingerprint will show. Choosing satin or eggshell solves that problem before it starts.
6. Cleaning Tools — Why It Saves You Money and Time
Neglecting to clean your tools isn’t just sloppy — it costs you. A $25 brush can last years if cleaned correctly, or a single day if left with dried paint in the bristles.
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Brushes: For latex paint, rinse in warm, soapy water and work paint out from the ferrule (metal part) to the tips. For oil-based paints, use mineral spirits.
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Rollers: Scrape out excess paint with a putty knife before washing — otherwise, you’ll waste paint and time.
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Never: Leave brushes soaking in water — it bends bristles and loosens the glue holding them together.
7. Storage of Materials — Protecting Your Investment
Paint and tools are expensive. Treat them like it.
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Paint Cans: Tap lids shut with a rubber mallet. Store upside down for an airtight seal if the can is clean.
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Labeling: Always mark the room name and date for touch-ups.
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Climate Control: Paint left in freezing garages or hot sheds can separate or harden. Store in a temperate, dry space.