
Fresh paint does more than change a color — it changes how a room feels. We prep every surface properly before a brush touches the wall, which is what separates a clean finish from a job that starts peeling in a year. Whether it is one room or the whole house, the work is done with care and attention to detail.

Your home's exterior takes the full force of Florida's heat, humidity, and storm season. A proper exterior paint job starts with thorough prep — cleaning, scraping, priming — before any color goes on. Done right, it protects the structure and keeps your home looking sharp for years without constant touch-ups.

Replacing cabinets is expensive. Refinishing them the right way is not. We strip, sand, prime, and repaint cabinets to a smooth, durable finish that holds up to daily use. It is one of the highest-return improvements you can make to a kitchen or bathroom without a full remodel.

Wood left untreated in Florida does not last. UV exposure and moisture break it down fast. Painting or staining your deck and fence on a regular cycle protects the wood and keeps it structurally sound. We clean and prep the surface first so the coating bonds properly and lasts as long as it should.

Pavers fade, stain, and shift over time — especially in Florida's climate. We clean them down to the surface, re-sand the joints if needed, and apply a quality sealer that brings the color back and protects against future wear. The difference before and after is usually dramatic.

Vinyl flooring has come a long way and it works well in Florida homes — durable, moisture-resistant, and easy to maintain. We handle the full installation from subfloor prep to final fit and finish. The result is a clean, level floor that looks good and holds up in high-traffic areas.

Tile is one of the best flooring choices for Florida's climate, but only when it is installed correctly. Poor tile work shows quickly — uneven grout lines, cracked tiles, hollow spots. We take the time to set it right so the floor is solid, level, and built to last.
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Shawn lives in the same neighborhoods he works in. When you call Shawn Christie Painting, you are dealing with the owner — someone who has a reputation to protect right here in Sarasota. There are no layers of subcontractors between you and the person responsible. The company has stood behind every job since 2004, and that is not changing.


This is not a franchise or an out-of-town company taking jobs in the area. Shawn lives and works in the same community his customers do. That matters when you need someone reliable, when you want a reference from a real neighbor, and when you expect the job to be done with local pride behind it.
Most painters just paint. Shawn came up through general construction before starting this company. That means he can identify surface issues, structural problems, and prep work that other contractors miss or ignore. You get a service provider who understands what is behind the walls and under the surface — not just what is on top.
Twenty years in business in one market does not happen by accident. It happens because customers come back and refer their neighbors. If something is not right after a job, it gets addressed. No runaround, no ignoring calls. That standard has been consistent since the company opened in 2004.
The cost depends on the size of the space, the number of rooms, and the condition of the walls. Most interior painting projects in the Sarasota area range based on square footage and how much prep work the surfaces need. The best way to get an accurate number is to schedule a free estimate so we can see the space in person. Every job is different, and a quote over the phone is rarely accurate.
A standard single-family home exterior typically takes two to four days from prep to finish, depending on the size of the house and weather conditions. Florida heat and afternoon storms can affect scheduling, so we build that into the timeline. Prep work — cleaning, scraping, priming — takes as much time as the painting itself when done correctly. Rushing that process is how you end up with paint that peels within a year.
In Florida's climate, most pavers should be resealed every two to three years depending on sun exposure, foot traffic, and whether the area gets regular moisture. UV rays break down sealers faster here than in cooler climates. When pavers start looking faded or stained and the water is no longer beading on the surface, that is a good sign it is time for resealing.
Cabinet painting is a legitimate alternative to replacement when the cabinet boxes are structurally sound. The key is proper prep — thorough cleaning, light sanding, and a bonding primer before any topcoat goes on. Skipping those steps is what causes cabinet paint to chip and peel. When done correctly, painted cabinets hold up well and can completely transform the look of a kitchen at a fraction of the replacement cost.