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If your home needs a paint job, and you just don’t have the time, a painting contractor can do the work quickly and professionally. You probably know the basics already: don’t paint on a marred or dirty surface. A good painting contractor however gets better results than most of us because they understand the importance of preparing the surface.
A qualified painter should invest more than half his time preparing the wall surface to be painted. He should wash, patch, scrape, sand, and caulk all surfaces before the first ounce of paint touches the wall. He should also use an undercoat or primer to seal the surface. Your painting contractor needs to be experienced and know exactly what type of paint is best for different projects. He should know the quality of different types of paint and know which will flake and blister, and which are completely scrubable — a big help if you have kids and pets.
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Nicknamed the “Mountain State,” West Virginia is very hilly and rugged, with the highest mean altitude (1,500 ft/457 m) of any state E of the Mississippi. Nearly all of the state is on the Allegheny Plateau, with the jagged Virginia–West Virginia line roughly following the eastern escarpment of the plateau (known as the Allegheny Front). Extremely irregular in outline, West Virginia has two narrow projections—the Northern Panhandle, which cuts north between Ohio and Pennsylvania, and the Eastern Panhandle, which cuts east between Maryland (with the Potomac River forming the state line) and Virginia. In the Eastern Panhandle, a part of the Appalachian ridge and valley country, lie the state's lowest point (240 ft/73 m) near Harpers Ferry where the Shenandoah River joins the Potomac, as well as its highest point, Spruce Knob (4,860 ft/1,481 m).
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