Wanting to fulfill someone’s dream in the form of a painting is not enough on its own.
To do that, you first need to understand what that dream actually is.
And that is the most complicated part:
finding the exact feeling the painting needs to carry in order to fulfill the client’s dream.
That’s why I have a process that makes everything much easier.
First comes the reservation.
The person reserves their spot.
Simple.
They fill out the form, choose their size and frame, and complete the payment.
That’s it.
Their spot is reserved.
And from that moment on, I begin working for that client so they can have the best experience possible.
Then comes the conversation.
A real one.
As soon as the client completes the reservation, I personally get in touch with that person.
Me.
I talk with the client for as long as needed.
If we need to talk by phone, we do.
If a video call helps, we do that too.
If we need to spend an hour talking about the painting, we spend an hour talking about the painting.
Because I need to understand the reason behind that piece.
What that photo means.
Where the painting will go.
Which wall they want to fill.
What feeling they want the room to have once the painting is hanging there.
What story they want behind it when someone walks into their home and asks about it.
I need to take all of that in to the point where, when I put the brush on the canvas,
I’m not copying a photo — I’m translating a story.
Because if I don’t understand it, I can’t paint it properly.
And I refuse to paint it any other way.
Only after that does the client send me the photo and I begin painting.
But I don’t just start and leave the client abandoned, like those online prints you buy to fill a wall,
Pay for, and then can only wait and hope they don’t look even cheaper in person than they did on the website.
No.
As I paint, I show how the piece is progressing.
I send photos of the process.
Daily, if needed.
If something doesn’t feel right to the client, they can tell me.
If they want to adjust a detail, they can tell me.
If the color isn’t quite right, they can tell me.
If something doesn’t express what they wanted, we review it.
It’s their painting.
And I want the client to be present at every step.
Then comes the preview and approval.
When the painting is finished, before doing anything else, I send a full preview.
If the client wants, we do a video call and look at it together.
They tell me what they think.
We review the details.
I adjust whatever needs adjusting.
Only when the client is completely satisfied — only when they give me the okay — do I move on.
And only then do I package and ship it.
Once the piece is approved, I package it and send it.
I wrap it with the same care someone would use to protect the piece that is finally going to fill the wall that had been waiting months for something real.
Then I hand it over to a premium courier service, because after weeks of work,
I refuse to let something so personal arrive damaged.
Shipping cost for the client: zero.
And I track every step until the painting reaches their hands.
Now, if you’ve made it this far, you probably want your own unique custom painting too.
There is one catch.
A big one.
Or maybe, for you, it won’t be a problem if you move quickly.
Keep reading to find out and see if you can get your painting and experience this unique process for yourself