Skip to content
8 March 2026 / 3 min read

Why one crew for the whole wall beats juggling trades

Plasterer, stopper, painter, cleaner. The handovers between them are where walls go wrong. Here is how we close the gaps.

A wall passes through a lot of hands. Someone fixes the board, someone stops the joins, someone skims it flat, someone paints it, and someone cleans up. On most jobs those are different crews, booked separately, turning up on different days.

The problem is not any one of them. The problem is the gaps between them. The stopper blames the board fixer, the painter blames the stopper, and you are stuck in the middle trying to work out whose finish failed. Meanwhile the schedule slips every time one trade waits on another.

The name Rush & Brush is the short version of how we avoid that. Rush is the plastering side, the skimming and rendering that takes a wall flat. Brush is the painting. We carry both, plus the GIB fixing and stopping before them and the clean-down after, with one crew of eight.

That means one point of contact, one team accountable for the whole surface, and no waiting on another contractor to free up. If something is not right, there is no one to point at but us, which is exactly the position we want to be in, because it keeps the standard honest.

If that sounds like less hassle than lining up three trades yourself, send us the details of your space and we will give you a free quote on carrying it the whole way.

Want this handled properly?

Send us the details of your space and we will give you a free, honest quote.

Get a free quote
Ready when you are

Tell us about your walls.

Send through the space and roughly what you are after. We will come back with a free, honest quote, no pressure either way.

Get a free quote 0210 2414 187

Free quote / no obligation