This will depend on your property, but commonly painted areas include rendered walls, guttering, soffits and fascias, and window frames. Generally you can paint what you want but on older or listed buildings, you may be restricted. An experienced painter will tell you what is possible.
Lauder
The Royal Burgh of Lauder is a town in the Scottish Borders in the historic county of Berwickshire. On the Southern Upland Way, the burgh lies 27 miles south east from Edinburgh, on the western border of the Lammermuir Hills. The current population of the town is around 1500, although it is quickly growing as over 100 new houses are being created on the southern boundary. This means that, at the start of the 21st century, the population is approaching what it was at the start of the 20th century ahead of the duration of depopulation over the last 100 years. Lauder is today highly directed by its distance to Edinburgh as it is now considered to be near enough for people to commute into the capital for work. The bus service to Edinburgh is trustworthy though infrequent. Significant structures in the town today feature the Tolbooth or Town Hall, which predates 1598 when records reveal it being burnt by a celebration of Homes and Cranstouns led by Lord Home, in a row in between them and the Lauder family who were at the time sitting on the bench as hereditary baillies. On 18 July 1793, during a major and prolonged thunderstorm, a 'ball of fire struck the steeple above the Tollbooth, and did considerable damage'. Ongoing contention in Lauder is the town's expansion, whether it is required or beneficial, the location of a brand-new primary school and how quickly one will be developed, and the area and extent of wind farms on the surrounding hills. Also on the agenda is the contention surrounding the formation of a brand-new health centre in the burgh. For all of your home developments, make certain to find dependable experts in Lauder to make certain of quality.