After you upload a job photo, Paintsight asks you to identify which part of the image you’re painting. Selecting the right surface tells the AI where to apply the color, so the preview reflects what the finished job will actually look like on that specific area — not the whole image.Documentation Index
Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://docs.paintsight.com/llms.txt
Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.
What “picking a surface” means
In Paintsight, a surface is the specific paintable area you want to preview on a given photo. When you select a surface type, you’re telling the system which region of the photo to target and what kind of material it’s working with. Different surfaces — siding, trim, cabinets — have different textures and paint behaviors, and the surface selection shapes how the preview renders the color. Each preview covers one surface. If a job involves multiple surfaces, you create a separate preview for each one.Supported surface types
Walls
Interior walls, including drywall and plaster. Use this for any room-by-room interior painting estimate.
Siding
Exterior siding in wood, vinyl, fiber cement, or similar materials. Use this for full exterior repaint jobs.
Trim
Baseboards, window casings, door frames, and fascia. Use this when trim is a separate color from the main surface.
Cabinets
Kitchen, bathroom, or built-in cabinets. Cabinet previews account for the panel-and-frame structure common in cabinet repaints.
Decks
Exterior wood or composite decking surfaces. Use this for deck stain or paint estimates.
Brick / masonry staining
Brick, concrete block, or masonry surfaces being stained or painted. Use this for exterior masonry jobs.
Precise surface selection gives you more accurate color visualization. Choosing “Trim” instead of a generic option, for example, ensures the AI applies the color to the right edges and proportions in the photo.