Painting a home, business, or community property comes with a lot of questions, and after 20+ years of work across Monmouth County, we have heard most of them. This page collects what clients ask us most often, organized by topic. If you do not find what you are looking for, call (732) 458-2438 – we are happy to answer anything before you commit.
Productive Painting is a family-owned painting company based in Wall Township, New Jersey. We’ve been serving Monmouth County and the wider Jersey Shore area for over 20 years. Owned and operated by John Griso, we handle residential, commercial, and HOA painting projects of every size — from a single accent wall in a Spring Lake home to multi-building condo communities along the shore.
Over 20 years. We’ve been painting homes, businesses, and community properties across Monmouth County since the early 2000s, and we’ve completed thousands of projects in that time. Most of our work today comes from repeat clients and referrals, which is the truest measure of how the work holds up over time.
Yes. Productive Painting holds NJ Home Improvement Contractor License #13VH04439800. We carry full general liability insurance and workers’ compensation coverage. Certificates of insurance (COIs) are available on request for any commercial client or HOA board. Most boards require COIs naming the association as an additional insured before a contract is signed, and we handle that as part of the proposal process.
Independent. We’re a family-owned, locally operated company. No franchise overhead, no out-of-state corporate office, no rotating cast of regional managers. John Griso owns the business and runs it day-to-day. When you call, you’re talking to people who actually work on the projects.
We’re a small, dedicated team, and that’s intentional. We’d rather have a small group of experienced painters who’ve worked together for years than a rotating roster of seasonal subcontractors. It means tighter quality control, better internal communication, and a finish that holds up. We scale up for larger commercial and HOA projects with painters we’ve worked alongside for a long time — never first-timers.
For the vast majority of projects, no — our own crew handles everything from start to finish. For specialty work that genuinely requires a different trade (electrical during a remodel, plumbing during a kitchen project, etc.), we’ll bring in trusted partners we’ve worked with for years. You’ll always know who’s on your property and when.
Three things: (1) People — our painters are experienced career professionals, not day laborers. (2) Prep work — we spend more time on surface prep than most contractors, which is the difference between paint that lasts five years and paint that’s peeling by year two. (3) Materials — we use Benjamin Moore and Sherwin-Williams products exclusively. None of those three are unique on their own, but the combination consistently produces better results than the alternative.
Yes. Every estimate we provide is free, with no obligation. We schedule a walk-through of your property — interior, exterior, or both — and you receive a detailed written quote with itemized pricing, recommended products, surface prep scope, and a project timeline, typically within 24–48 hours of the visit.
Three ways:
We usually visit within 3–5 business days of your initial call. For larger commercial or HOA projects, we may schedule a second site visit for detailed measurements and a deeper scope review. Written quotes typically follow within 24–48 hours of the on-site visit. During peak exterior season (May–October), schedules fill up faster — book early for the most flexibility.
Helpful to have on hand:
You don’t need exact measurements — we’ll handle that during the walk-through.
Three main reasons: paint quality, surface prep, and labor cost. A “cheap” quote almost always means cutting on one of those. Bargain paint fades and peels quicker. Skipping primer or thorough surface prep means the paint doesn’t bond properly. Paying day-labor wages means rushed work with no quality control. Productive Painting uses premium Benjamin Moore and Sherwin-Williams products, preps every surface properly, and pays our painters as career professionals. That shows up in the price — and in how long the finish lasts.
For very simple jobs (“paint one standard-size bedroom, white, no repairs”), we can give a rough range over the phone. For anything more complex — exteriors, kitchens, commercial spaces, HOAs — we don’t believe in phone estimates because too much depends on the actual condition of the surfaces. We’d rather come out and give you an accurate, honest number than guess and surprise you later.
For most projects, yes. A typical residential deposit is 30–50% at contract signing, with the balance due on completion. Larger projects (HOA, commercial, full exterior repaints) may have a phased payment schedule tied to project milestones (e.g., 30% deposit, 30% at mid-project, balance on completion). All payment terms are spelled out in the written contract before any work begins.
Check, cash, ACH transfer, and major credit cards (Visa, MasterCard, AmEx, Discover). Larger commercial and HOA clients typically pay via check or ACH on agreed-upon terms (often net-30 for established commercial accounts). Card payments may include a small processing fee on larger invoices.
We don’t currently offer in-house financing. For larger residential projects, many clients use home equity lines, personal loans, or general home-improvement financing. Some homeowners may qualify for energy efficiency rebates or local home improvement grants depending on the scope — we’re happy to share what we know, though we’re painters, not financial advisors.
We have a soft minimum on smaller jobs to make the travel and setup worthwhile, typically around the cost of repainting one or two rooms. For very small touch-up jobs (a single wall, patching a few spots), we sometimes recommend combining with another project or batching multiple small items into one visit.
Our written estimates are complete — what you see is what you pay, barring scope changes you request mid-project. The only things that can change the price after work begins are: discovering hidden damage (water damage behind wallpaper, rotted wood under siding, mold behind drywall), or you adding rooms/surfaces to the scope. We always discuss any change-order before doing the work.
For interior projects, 2–4 weeks lead time is typical. For exterior projects in peak season (April–October), 4–8 weeks is more realistic — we book quickly when the weather is good. Commercial and HOA projects often need 4–8 weeks for scheduling around board approvals, business hours, or seasonal needs. Booking earlier always gives you more flexibility on dates.
Late April through October, with the sweet spot being May–June and September–October. Temperatures need to stay consistently above 50°F (ideally above 55°F for most exterior paints), and surfaces must be dry. We watch humidity and dew point closely — both can ruin a fresh paint job within hours. Mid-summer can be tough on the hottest days (paint dries too fast and lap marks become visible), so we work early mornings and shaded sides during heat waves.
Generally no. Most exterior paints require temperatures above 50°F for proper cure, and New Jersey winters drop well below that, often for weeks at a time. We do schedule exterior work occasionally during winter warm spells if conditions hold, but it’s risky and not recommended. Interior work continues year-round.
We’ll give you a specific day-count in the written estimate, and we stick to it unless you change the scope.
A standard single-family home exterior takes 5–10 working days, depending on size, surface condition, and prep needs. Larger or more complex homes (Victorians with detailed trim, multi-story homes with extensive carpentry) can take 2–3 weeks. Weather adds variability — we won’t paint in rain, fog, high humidity, or temperatures outside the paint’s tolerance range. We typically build a small buffer for weather into project timelines.
Yes, especially for commercial and HOA projects. We schedule off-hours, weekends, and phased work whenever needed to minimize disruption. For residential interiors, we typically work 8am–5pm, but we’ll adjust if you have specific constraints (work-from-home meetings, infant nap schedules, evening events). Just let us know during the estimate so we can plan.
Rain delays exterior work — we don’t paint wet surfaces, and we plan around forecasted rain days. Most exterior projects have a small built-in weather buffer, and a few rain days won’t push the completion date significantly. For longer rain stretches, we’ll communicate revised timelines as soon as we can. We track the forecast daily and start each morning with a go/no-go call based on conditions.
For residential jobs, we typically work weekdays. For commercial and HOA projects where business hours matter, we frequently schedule evening, weekend, and overnight work to minimize disruption — for many commercial clients this is the default. Just ask during the estimate.
For interior residential, we typically start around 8am and wrap by 5pm. For exteriors in summer, we sometimes start at 7am to beat the heat. For commercial off-hours work, schedules are tailored to the project (evenings 6pm–midnight, overnight 10pm–6am, etc.).
Peak season is roughly April through October, dominated by exterior work. Off-season (November–March) is when interior projects shift to the front of the schedule. If you have flexibility on timing, off-season interior projects often have more available dates and can sometimes be scheduled with shorter lead times.
Full residential services:
Several approaches work:
We’re paint experts and can offer informal recommendations, but we’ll be honest: we’re painters, not interior designers.
Interior walls: two coats over primer (when primer is needed). For deep color changes or covering darker existing paint, sometimes three coats. Trim and doors: typically two coats. Ceilings: usually two coats. Exteriors: two coats over proper primer. We don’t shortcut this — one-coat jobs almost always look uneven and don’t hold up.
For interior work, not necessarily for the whole project. Many clients give us a key or door code and check in once or twice a day. We’re fully insured, careful with belongings, and treat your home with the same care we’d treat our own. We do need you available for:
We move furniture away from walls, cover everything with drop cloths and plastic, and put it back when the project is done. For very heavy items (pianos, large armoires, gun safes) or anything you’d rather not have moved, we work around it. For larger remodel-style projects, we sometimes recommend moving smaller items into a single staging room to speed up the project.
For sensitive surfaces (hardwood, polished concrete, expensive area rugs), we add extra protection and bring it up with you during the estimate.
Strongly not recommended. Wallpaper paste, seams, and texture all show through paint over time, and any moisture gets trapped behind the paper. We remove wallpaper first, repair the wall properly, and then paint. Wallpaper removal can take significant time depending on age and adhesive type — it’s reflected in the estimate, but it’s the right way.
Yes. Cabinet painting is one of the highest-impact upgrades you can make for the cost. Our process:
Cabinet projects typically take 5–10 days depending on the number of doors and the level of prep needed. The result is a factory-quality finish that holds up to daily kitchen use.
With premium products and proper prep, interior walls in normal-use areas typically look great for 7–10 years before needing a refresh. High-traffic areas (kitchens, hallways, kids’ rooms, bathrooms) may show wear sooner — 5–7 years is normal. Trim and doors with semi-gloss or satin finish often last 10–15 years before needing repaint.
A properly-prepped exterior using premium paint typically holds up 8–12 years in New Jersey weather. South-facing walls and trim get more UV exposure and may need touch-ups sooner. Wood surfaces age faster than vinyl or fiber cement. Coastal homes (within a mile of the ocean) tend to need more frequent maintenance because of salt air. We can recommend products with the right durability profile for your location during the estimate.
Yes. The process:
It’s messy work but completely changes how a room feels. Often done as part of a larger interior repaint.
Yes. Each masonry surface needs the right approach:
For exterior masonry, we often recommend elastomeric coatings for added crack-bridging and weatherproofing.
Yes. We stain or paint decks, fences, pergolas, gazebos, and outdoor wood structures. For most decks, staining is preferred over painting — stain penetrates and protects the wood without forming a film that can peel. For fences and pergolas, both stain and paint work depending on the look you want. We’ll recommend the right product for your wood type and exposure.
Yes, with the right product. Modern paint formulations include vinyl-safe options that bond properly and don’t void the siding warranty. We use lighter colors on vinyl in most cases — dark colors absorb heat and can cause vinyl to warp. We’ll discuss color choices and product specs during the estimate.
Offices, retail stores, restaurants, warehouses, industrial facilities, medical and dental offices, schools and daycares, gyms and fitness centers, salons, banks, automotive dealerships, churches, and any other commercial property. We’ve handled everything from small storefronts in downtown Red Bank to multi-story office buildings in the Tinton Falls and Eatontown corridors.
Almost always. Commercial painting typically happens off-hours — evenings, overnight, or weekends — to minimize disruption to your operations. We schedule the project to work around your business, not the other way around. For 24/7 operations (some medical, some industrial), we coordinate with you on phased work in operational vs. non-operational zones.
Yes. We carry full general liability insurance, workers’ compensation, and we follow OSHA safety standards on every commercial project. Certificates of insurance are provided for every commercial contract, and we can name your business as an additional insured if required. For specialty safety credentials (lift work, confined space, hazmat surfaces), we have those certifications or partner with appropriately credentialed subs.
Yes. Warehouse interiors and exteriors, high-bay walls, steel structures, exposed beams, light poles, mezzanines, and concrete floors (floor coating projects). For specialty industrial coatings (epoxies, intumescent paint for fire-rated surfaces, anti-graffiti coatings, etc.), we use the right product for the application and verify it meets any required specs.
Yes — this is one of our most common commercial requests. We typically schedule phased after-hours work: one section or floor at a time, often starting at 6pm and finishing by 6am, with rapid turnaround so each phase is back in operation the next business day. For sensitive workplaces (medical, food service, daycares), we use low-odor or zero-VOC paint to keep air quality clean for next-day reopening.
Light pole painting includes prep (sanding, rust removal where needed), primer, and a durable finish coat designed for outdoor steel exposure. We use safe work practices on lift equipment, follow OSHA fall-protection rules, and coordinate with property managers to close off areas during work. Often paired with parking lot striping, signage, or other exterior maintenance.
Yes. Many commercial clients and HOAs have us on annual or biennial maintenance contracts — we walk the property each year, identify what needs touch-up or repaint, and schedule it before small issues become bigger problems. Maintenance contracts typically cost less than emergency repairs and keep properties looking sharp year-round. We can quote a maintenance contract during the initial commercial estimate.
For most retail and restaurant projects, painting happens during closed hours (overnight, or before/after business hours). For longer projects, we sometimes phase the work so only one section is offline at a time. We can also paint during business hours if you have a slow weekday morning — it depends on the layout, the surfaces, and customer flow.
Yes. EIFS (Exterior Insulation and Finish System), traditional stucco, and other exterior commercial wall systems get specific treatment depending on the material. We assess for cracks, repair, prime with the right primer for the surface type, and apply elastomeric or other recommended coatings. Commercial exteriors often benefit from elastomeric for crack bridging and water resistance — we’ll recommend if appropriate.
Yes. For new commercial construction, we coordinate with the general contractor on scheduled timing. Painting usually happens after drywall, framing, and rough trades are complete, and before flooring and final installations. We work to construction-grade schedules without cutting corners on finish quality.
Yes, regularly. About a third of our annual work is HOA or community association painting throughout Monmouth County. We understand the unique requirements: board approvals, multi-phase scheduling, resident communication, accurate proposals, and compliance with association governing documents.
We provide detailed written proposals that boards can review and discuss. Each proposal includes:
For complex projects, we’ll present in person at a board meeting if requested. We’ve found this often shortens the approval cycle because the board can ask questions in real time.
Yes — phasing is standard for larger HOA projects. We typically paint one building or section at a time, complete it fully (including the punch list), and move to the next. This keeps the property looking presentable throughout the project rather than having multiple half-painted buildings at once. Phasing also lets us spread resident impact over the project timeline.
We work with the property manager or board to provide:
Communication is one of the most important parts of HOA work — when residents know what’s happening, complaints go way down.
Yes, before any contract is signed. We issue COIs naming the association as an additional insured if required, and at the coverage limits your governing documents specify. Workers’ compensation certificates included.
Yes. Color matching is straightforward for most HOAs — we get the existing paint code from the association documents (or color-match from a clean sample area) and use the exact same product and finish. For older communities where original specs are lost, we color-match from a representative sample. Documentation of products used is provided so future maintenance is easier.
Yes. Lobbies, hallways, stairwells, mailrooms, fitness centers, party rooms, clubhouses, pool houses, and elevator vestibules — all common-area interiors are work we regularly perform. These are usually scheduled during off-peak hours (overnight, early morning, weekends) to minimize impact on residents.
All HOA contracts include a written warranty (typically 2–3 years on labor, plus manufacturer warranties on materials). For multi-building projects, we keep detailed records of:
Warranty calls are responded to within 5 business days, and we work directly with the property manager or board to schedule any covered repairs.
Yes. We’re comfortable in competitive bid situations and we provide proposals that boards can compare against other contractors apples-to-apples. We don’t lowball to win and then change-order our way to a higher price — our proposal is the price you pay, barring scope changes you request.
Yes. Entry signs, monument signs, gates, fences, mailbox structures, and shared amenity features are all part of the work we do for HOAs. These are often combined with annual maintenance contracts.
Absolutely. We work with many of the property management companies serving Monmouth County. We handle invoicing, scheduling, and reporting in whatever format your management company prefers. References available on request.
Benjamin Moore and Sherwin-Williams, exclusively. Both are top-tier professional brands with the durability, color consistency, and application qualities we need. We don’t use off-brand or bargain paint — the finish only lasts as long as the product allows, and saving 30% on the paint cost almost always means losing 50% of the lifespan.
Both are excellent, and we use both regularly. The differences are subtle:
For any specific project, we’ll recommend the product line that best fits the application — it’s about the product, not the brand.
Yes. Both Benjamin Moore and Sherwin-Williams offer low-VOC and zero-VOC product lines. These are great for homes with kids, pets, indoor air-quality concerns, sensitive occupants, or anyone wanting to minimize off-gassing. We can use them on any project — sometimes at a small price premium, but often comparable to standard premium lines.
General guidelines:
These are starting points — we’ll recommend based on your specific rooms, lighting, and how the space is used.
For decks, fences, and natural-wood elements, stain is usually the better choice. For siding and trim that needs to look uniform and last, paint is the go-to. Some products bridge the two (semi-transparent stains, solid-color stains).
We’re happy to provide informal recommendations based on your home’s style, lighting, existing finishes, and what works in similar projects we’ve done. For larger or more design-sensitive projects (whole-house repaints, kitchens with cabinets being painted), we sometimes recommend working with an independent color consultant who specializes in interior design — they bring a different skillset than we do.
Almost never exactly. Lighting in your home differs from the paint store, and small swatches don’t show the full color the way a whole wall does. We strongly recommend buying a sample quart of your top 2–3 colors and painting a 2×2-foot test patch on the actual wall, viewing it at different times of day (morning, afternoon, evening with lamps on) before final commitment.
When needed, yes — almost always. Primer is essential for:
We use the right primer for the surface (bonding, stain-blocking, alkali-resistant, rust-inhibiting, etc.). Skipping primer to save a step or save money is one of the most common shortcuts in budget paint jobs — we don’t do it.
Yes, with proper primer or with a high-coverage paint applied in multiple coats. For dramatic color changes (deep red to white, navy to cream), expect a tinted primer coat plus 2–3 finish coats. Skipping the primer just to save a step almost always results in the old color bleeding through, especially under bright light.
For nearly all modern residential and commercial projects, water-based (latex/acrylic) paints are preferred — they’ve improved dramatically over the past 20 years and now match or exceed oil-based performance for most applications, with less odor, faster dry times, easier cleanup, and lower VOCs. Oil-based still has a place for some specific applications (some metal surfaces, some specialty finishes, some industrial applications), and we’ll specify when it’s the right call.
Yes, especially exterior paint on south-facing walls. UV exposure breaks down pigments over years, and certain colors (deep reds, dark blues) tend to fade faster than others. Premium products are formulated for better UV resistance — Sherwin-Williams Emerald and Benjamin Moore Aura, for example, hold color noticeably better than budget lines. For exterior projects in high-sun areas, we’ll recommend products with the best UV resistance.
Thorough prep, depending on the surface and condition:
Prep is where 80% of the quality lives. A finish over good prep lasts twice as long as a finish over rushed prep.
Yes. Patching nail holes, repairing larger holes (anchor holes, fist-sized damage, water damage), fixing cracks, taping and floating seams, skim-coating, and texture matching. For larger drywall projects (entire walls or ceilings), we install new drywall as needed and finish to match the existing texture. All repairs are properly finished and primed before paint goes on.
Yes. Wallpaper removal techniques depend on the type, age, and adhesive:
After removal, walls almost always need skim-coating and priming before paint to achieve a smooth finish. Wallpaper removal can take significantly longer than the painting itself on old applications — it’s reflected in the estimate.
Yes. Wood replacement is a regular part of exterior painting projects, especially on older homes. Common replacements:
We replace with new wood matched to the existing profile (or a more durable composite where appropriate). This is done before paint goes on — painting over rotted wood is throwing money away.
Yes. Tuck-pointing (re-mortaring old brick joints), patching cracks in stucco or concrete, repairing concrete steps and walkways, sealing porous masonry surfaces, and applying elastomeric coatings for waterproof protection. Masonry work is often paired with exterior painting projects on older homes and commercial buildings.
Elastomeric is a thick, flexible exterior coating that stretches with the building as it expands and contracts with temperature changes. Key properties:
Commonly used on stucco, concrete, masonry, and EIFS surfaces — especially in the Northeast where freeze-thaw cycles cause cracking. More expensive than standard paint but much longer-lasting on the right substrate.
Yes. Caulking gaps around windows, doors, trim joints, and surface penetrations is part of every exterior project — it’s essential for both moisture protection and a clean paint finish. For waterproofing-specific projects (basement walls, foundation parging, masonry surfaces), we use products designed for water-side and pressure-side applications as appropriate.
Yes. For new construction (custom homes, additions, major renovations), we coordinate with the general contractor on scheduled timing. Painting usually happens after drywall is finished and trim is installed, but before flooring and final installations. We work to construction-grade schedules without cutting corners on finish quality.
Yes. For exterior projects involving shutters, we typically remove them, paint behind, refresh or repaint the shutters themselves, and reinstall. Hardware that’s rusted or failing is replaced as needed (cost discussed during the estimate).
Yes. Stucco patching for hairline cracks, larger crack repair with elastomeric fillers, and complete stucco section replacement for damaged areas. After patching, the surface is primed and painted with masonry-rated paint or elastomeric coating for a unified finish.
Yes. Exterior wood doors (front doors, garage doors, French doors) can be stripped, sanded, repaired, and refinished as part of an exterior project or as a standalone job. Premium products and proper prep make the difference between a door refinish that lasts 5+ years and one that’s peeling by the next summer.
All of Monmouth County, New Jersey. Wall Township is our base (HQ at 2174 Gladfield Dr, Wall Twp, NJ 07719), but we travel daily across the county. That includes the bayshore towns (Atlantic Highlands, Keyport, Keansburg, Union Beach, Hazlet), the Two Rivers area (Red Bank, Rumson, Fair Haven, Little Silver, Shrewsbury), the Jersey Shore communities (Asbury Park, Belmar, Spring Lake, Manasquan, Sea Girt, Brielle), and inland areas (Freehold, Marlboro, Manalapan, Howell, Holmdel, Colts Neck).
For larger projects (commercial, HOA, custom residential), yes — adjacent areas of Ocean County and the lower part of Middlesex County are reasonable, particularly for commercial and HOA work. For very small jobs outside our regular footprint, the travel time may not work economically.
Almost certainly. We’ve worked in every part of Monmouth County over the past 20+ years — from Sandy Hook in the north to the Jersey Shore beach towns, from Freehold and Manalapan in the west to the Two Rivers area in the east. If you have specific questions about our experience in your town or want to see examples of work we’ve done in your area, just ask.
Two big ways:
Yes — and we have specific experience with the challenges of beach-area homes. Salt air shortens paint life, sand and dune grass can affect prep, and many shore towns have specific aesthetic standards or HOA color palettes. We use products formulated for coastal exposure and follow approval processes for towns that require them.
Yes. We’ve painted many historic homes throughout Monmouth County, including in historic districts where color schemes must be approved by local commissions. We work within those guidelines, source historically appropriate products and colors, and use techniques compatible with older construction (lath-and-plaster walls, original wood siding, etc.).
Yes. Standard warranties:
Plus the manufacturer warranties on the paint products themselves — Benjamin Moore and Sherwin-Williams premium products typically carry 5–25 year manufacturer warranties depending on the product line.
Defects in workmanship: peeling, cracking, bubbling, or premature failure caused by prep or application issues attributable to our work.
What’s not covered: damage from outside causes (impact, water leaks from other sources, ice damage to siding, vandalism, drastic changes in building conditions, etc.), normal wear, or fading from UV exposure beyond the manufacturer’s product warranty terms.
If you’re unsure whether something is covered, just call — we’ll come look and discuss what’s going on. We’d rather have the conversation than have you avoid calling.
We respond to all warranty calls within 5 business days. For active issues (visible peeling, paint failure on a recently completed job), we usually get out to inspect within 7–10 days and resolve as quickly as possible. For HOA and commercial clients, we have dedicated contacts to streamline warranty communication.
100% satisfaction. The project isn’t done until you say it’s done. We do a final walk-through with you at the end of every project, address any punch-list items immediately, and don’t pack up until you’re happy with the work. If you spot something later (within reason), call — we’ll come back and address it.
Our general liability insurance covers any property damage we cause during a project (rare, but it happens — a dropped ladder, accidental overspray, etc.). Our workers’ compensation insurance covers any injury our crew might sustain on your property — which means you’re not personally exposed to liability if a worker is injured. Both are essential coverage for any contractor, and we keep both at full coverage limits.
We still want to know. Even out of warranty, we’d rather hear about an issue and figure out what’s going on. Often it’s something we can fix for very little or no cost, and it helps us understand what holds up vs. what doesn’t on different surfaces or in different conditions. Long-term reputation matters more to us than getting one extra warranty call off the books.
We guarantee our workmanship; fading is governed by the manufacturer’s product warranty. Premium products typically carry strong fade-resistance warranties (10+ years on top exterior products). If your paint fades prematurely outside expected ranges, we help process the manufacturer warranty claim — Benjamin Moore and Sherwin-Williams stand behind their premium products and we have direct contacts for warranty handling.
Yes. We have references available — residential, commercial, and HOA. Many of our clients are in your area and happy to talk about their experience. We also have galleries of past work on the website and can share project-specific examples relevant to your situation.
Yes, with client permission. We document our work for our own portfolio, for use in proposals to future clients, and for reference if any future maintenance is needed. Photos are never shared without permission, and addresses or identifying details are kept private unless a client specifically agrees.
Your warranty doesn’t transfer automatically, but we’re often willing to honor warranty work for new homeowners on a case-by-case basis, especially if the issue is clearly workmanship-related. The right thing for us to do is usually to make it right regardless of who owns the home.
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## Still have questions?
If your question isn’t covered above, we’re happy to answer it directly.
Phone: (732) 458-2438 Email: johngriso@productivepaint.com Website: productivepaint.com Free estimate: Request a quote online
Hours: Monday–Friday 8:00am–5:00pm · Saturday 8:00am–1:00pm · Sunday closed
If your question is not covered above, we are happy to answer it directly. Reach us at (732) 458-2438 or through our contact form.
Monday–Friday 8:00am–5:00pm · Saturday 8:00am–1:00pm