iPaint Bathroom Painting Gallery in Edmonton
15 bathroom projects in Edmonton.
Bathroom Painting is the one interior job where the wrong finish fails fastest. iPaint Bathroom Painting in Edmonton shows what moisture-tested colour and the right sheen look like once shower steam, cold winter walls, and daily splash are accounted for. Edmonton Bathrooms swing from shower humidity to bone-dry minus-30 air, and that swing peels a coating chosen for looks alone. Every project below uses a finish built to shrug off condensation, resist mildew at the grout line, and still read warm in a small windowless space. iPaint Painting serves Edmonton, Sherwood Park, St Albert, Spruce Grove, and Leduc.
What iPaint's bathroom painting gallery in Edmonton shows
iPaint's bathroom gallery shows real Edmonton ensuites, powder rooms, and main baths, not staged showrooms. Each image pairs a wall colour with a vanity finish and a sheen chosen for moisture, so you can see how a navy vanity reads against marble, how a dark soaker-tub wall holds up in low light, and how a bright white powder room stays crisp without glare. Look past the colour and you are looking at finish decisions: the wall sheen, the trim sheen, and how the vanity was prepped and refinished. Those three choices decide whether a bathroom still looks new in five years or shows roller marks and mildew spotting in eighteen months. iPaint photographs finished work under normal bathroom lighting so the gallery reflects how the room actually lives.
iPaint's moisture- and mildew-resistant finishes for Edmonton bathrooms
iPaint uses bathroom-rated, mildew-resistant interior coatings on every wall and ceiling in a wet room, because standard flat wall paint traps moisture and grows spotting along the shower wall and ceiling. Bathroom and kitchen formulas carry surfactant and mildewcide packages that ordinary living-room paint does not. iPaint primes bare or patched drywall, spot-treats any existing mildew before a drop of colour goes on, and finishes ceilings in a washable coating rather than the chalky flat ceiling paint most homes ship with. Ventilation matters as much as the can: a bathroom fan that actually moves air, run for fifteen minutes after a shower, protects the finish far longer than any premium label can on its own. iPaint flags weak exhaust during the estimate so the paint is not asked to do the fan's job. Humidity behaves differently in a tight ensuite than in a roomy main bath, and homes near the North Saskatchewan River Valley can run damper still, which is exactly why a mildew-rated film earns its place here.
Semi-gloss vs satin: which finish iPaint uses where
Semi-gloss is the most scrubbable, most moisture-shedding common interior sheen, which is why iPaint defaults to it on bathroom trim, doors, and vanities; satin is the softer, lower-glare wall option that still wipes clean. The trade-off is simple: gloss resists water and scrubbing best but shows every wall imperfection, while a satin or low-sheen wall hides minor drywall flaws and feels calmer in a small room. The comparison below is how iPaint matches finish to surface in an Edmonton bathroom.
| Surface | Semi-gloss vs satin | Why iPaint chooses it |
|---|---|---|
| Vanity, doors, trim | Semi-gloss | Sheds splash, scrubs clean, takes daily hand contact without marking. |
| Main walls (windowed bath) | Satin or low-sheen | Wipes clean, low glare, hides minor drywall flaws in a small space. |
| Ceiling above shower | Washable satin (not flat) | Resists condensation spotting where flat ceiling paint fails first. |
Colours that work for small Edmonton bathrooms and ensuites
iPaint pairs bathroom colour to the room's light, not to a swatch on a showroom wall, because Edmonton's long, low winter daylight changes how a colour reads from October to April. Warm whites and soft greiges open up a windowless powder room and keep it from feeling clinical under LED light. Deep navy, charcoal, and forest green turn a windowed ensuite into a spa-style retreat and hide water marks better than pale walls near the tub. For a small bathroom, iPaint coordinates the wall colour with the vanity and the tile so the eye reads one calm scheme instead of three competing finishes. The gallery above shows both directions: bright-and-airy for tight spaces, and rich-and-dark for ensuites with enough light to carry it. iPaint has matched bathroom colour this way across Edmonton, Sherwood Park, Fort Saskatchewan, and St Albert homes, where winter light is the deciding factor far more often than the swatch fan. Newer builds across Strathcona County tend toward bright neutral schemes, while older central Edmonton baths often suit a deeper, warmer palette.
What drives the result and the cost of a bathroom repaint
iPaint's bathroom results are driven by prep and finish selection far more than by the colour on the wall. The cost of a bathroom repaint in Edmonton depends on the room size, whether the vanity is being refinished, the amount of mildew remediation and drywall repair needed, and how many coats the chosen colour requires. A powder room with sound walls is a fast, low-cost job; a full ensuite with a refinished vanity, ceiling work, and a dark colour over a light base sits at the higher end. iPaint quotes each bathroom after seeing the room, so the price reflects the actual prep rather than a guess. For a written figure, request a free estimate or see the pricing and estimate page.
Bathroom painting FAQs for Edmonton homeowners
What is the best paint finish for a bathroom in Edmonton?
iPaint uses semi-gloss on bathroom trim, doors, and vanities and a satin or low-sheen, mildew-resistant formula on the walls. Semi-gloss sheds moisture and scrubs clean where it matters most, while a satin wall lowers glare and hides minor flaws in a small space.
How does iPaint stop mildew on freshly painted bathroom walls?
iPaint treats any existing mildew before painting, primes the surface, and applies a bathroom-rated coating with a built-in mildewcide. iPaint also checks that the exhaust fan actually moves air, because ventilation run for fifteen minutes after a shower is what protects the finish long term.
What colours work best in a small Edmonton ensuite?
iPaint recommends warm whites and soft greiges for windowless powder rooms to keep them bright under LED light, and deep navy, charcoal, or forest green for windowed ensuites that can carry a richer, spa-style tone. The wall colour is coordinated with the vanity and tile so the room reads as one scheme.
How much does a bathroom repaint cost in Edmonton in 2026?
Bathroom repaint cost in Edmonton depends on room size, vanity refinishing, mildew and drywall repair, and the number of coats. A small powder room is a low-cost job, while a full ensuite with a refinished vanity sits higher. iPaint provides a written quote after seeing the room, with no obligation.
See the rest of iPaint's work on the main gallery, explore interior painting and cabinet refinishing for vanities, or check painting across Edmonton. Ready to refresh your bathroom? Call iPaint at 780-938-9555 for a free estimate.
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