








Pollen is relentless this time of year. It coats everything - glass, sills, screens - and it builds up fast. What starts as a light haze turns into a layer of grime that no amount of sunlight makes look better. Most people wipe the glass and call it done, but the sills and tracks are where the real buildup hides.
Here's what we were working with on this one. The exterior glass was covered in water spots and pollen residue, the sills had packed-in debris sitting right along the frame edge, and the tracks had the kind of dirt that just doesn't come out with a paper towel. It's the stuff that makes even a clean-looking window feel neglected up close.
We handled the full picture - exterior window cleaning to pull the water spots and pollen off the glass, plus track detailing to get into the tight spots where grime collects along the frame. That combination matters. Clean glass with dirty sills and tracks just doesn't hold up. The whole thing has to be done right.
The difference isn't subtle. Clear glass, clean sills, no spots. The view through the window is actually a view again - not a hazy, spotted reminder that the exterior needs attention. That's what a thorough window cleaning actually gets you.
A lot of window cleaning stops at the glass. We don't. The sills and tracks are part of the job, and when it's all done together, you can actually tell. If your windows are looking like these did before we got started, it's worth getting them taken care of properly.