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They are objects decoratively covered with lacquer. The lacquer - a transparent or sometimes colored, very durable woodfinish - was and is often used to cover and protect decorations made on the wood of the object.
Shellac and lacquer are both fairly easy to identify because they will redissolve in their original solvents. If alcohol (solvent alcohol from the hardware store, not rubbing alcohol) dissolves it then it's shellac. If lacquer thinner softens it, then it's lacquer. (lacquer thinner will also dissolve shellac, but alcohol will not immediately soften lacquer, so do the alcohol check first.) If neither alcohol nor lacquer thinner immediately affect it, then it's probably varnish.* http://ths.gardenweb.com/forums/load/wood/msg0822004022412.html
I would use a good primer first.
it is an acrylic plate cover the maxillary or the mandibular teeth to treat trouble of TMJ
A bundle of Shingles will cover roughly 33 square feet. A square of Shingles (3 Bundles) will cover 100 square feet.
Yes. Cover the Alkyd Surface with Liquitex Clear Gesso first, then paint in acrylic. I've done this before with no ill effects whatsoever.
A square foot will cover a square foot, regardless of the depth of the material the cover is made of.
Three square feet would cover one square yard or 36 square inches.
As long as the surface is clean and dull, then either an oil or acrylic primer can be used to cover oil-based paints.
It cover 500 thousand square miles.
"Square feet" aren't things that are used to cover area."35 square feet" is an amount of area that you have to cover with something.
It is very easy to coat enamel paints with acrylic paints but you really should pay attention to a couple of points if you want it to be successful. Always sand the the enamal well and fill any holes with lindeed putty then apply a good coat of undercoat. I use an oil based undercoat first and then several days later sand the undercoat lightly and coat with acrylic all purpose undercoat. Once you have done this you can apply acrylic top coats. If you are using a self priming type acrylic paint on external work, you could skip the acrylic undercoat and apply it straight on to the oil based undercoat but you must leave it for several days to dry completely before coating with acrylic. I have used both methods over the past 5 years and both have not shown any sign of problems to date.