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.
Newmilns
Newmilns and also Greenholm is a tiny burgh in East Ayrshire, Scotland. It has a population of 3,057 individuals (2001 census) and rests on the A71, around 7 miles east of Kilmarnock as well as twenty-five miles southwest of Glasgow. It is situated in a valley whereby the River Irvine runs and, with the adjoining towns of Darvel as well as Galston, forms an area known as the Upper Irvine Valley (locally described as The Valley). As the name recommends, the burgh exists in 2 parts - Newmilns to the north of the river and Greenholm to the south. The river also divides the parishes of Loudoun and Galston, which is why the burgh, although normally described as Newmilns, has actually retained both names. Of the mills themselves, little bit currently stays. The last in operation was Pate's Mill, which sat on Brown Street opposite the railway station (contemporary Vesuvius structure). Famous in Allan Ramsay's poem, "The Lass o Pate's Mill", it was demolished in 1977 and all that now remains becomes part of the mill's outside wall surface. The only mill building still intact can be located at the foot of Ladeside. Currently made use of as housing, Loudoun Mill (previously the Meal Mill/ Corn Mill of Newmilns) was in usage from 1593 till it quit creating dish in the 1960s. In 1970, the mill wheel was eliminated as well as the lade completed, with the only continuing to be suggestion of the site's former use being an adage, "No Mill, No Meal - JA 1914" etched on the outer wall.