no, that is ridiculous. Beep beep.
No latex has some kind of an ingredient that is not supposed to be consumed by humans
Oil based primer is the best bridge between oil and latex paints. If oil based paints are not available in your area, a high adhesion acrylic primer over a well prepared surface will also work.
Yes, you can be allergic to your mattress or to something in your mattress. If you are allergic to dust mites then the mattress should be covered with an all over dust mite cover. If you are allergic to latex and the mattress is an old latex one, there may be fine particles of latex coming out of it.
heck yea
The best I've ever been able to find is a leather covered basketball. They are generally more expensive than a rubber ball and should only be used indoors, but they are great for people with latex allergies.
From what I hear, suave lotion and latex hate each other, they will fight in public and cause a scene. It is really embarrassing when latex accuses the lotion for being a masturbatory aide to which the reply is latex is used to wrap a hog. They get rude!
I know that Shoe Goop and Gloozit do it really well. New glues that claim to do it are E6000 and PL Premium.
No, you either need to really rough up the oil paint with fine sand paper, or put a base coat on before you paint with your Latex paint. If you don't your Latex paint won't adhere.
As long as you sand & prime first, in most cases just latex primer applied before painting with the latex paint. If the old paint is really old, be careful about sanding, it may contain lead.
Not really. Stain needs to absorb in to a wooden surface. If the surface is covered with anything it will reject the oil that carries that stain colour. It will dry against the surface but because its not fully adhered it will come off
You will be able to find really nice latex pads to put on your mattress at Overstock.com. They offer many different types with incredible prices.
As someone who sells both feather by PCF and latex from Latex Mattress Company, I feel qualified to answer. Hands down, latex is going to offer the most durable product and perhaps more comfort as well. I've seen latex mattresses last over 50 years without changing. Feather products are not really designed to give you support, more so just to soften up an existing bed. I guess it really depends on what you consider to be "better." To add to that, latex would be my choice as well. Latex toppers create pressure relieving surfaces while being much more supportive than a feather topper, and organic latex toppers are produced from all natural materials, which can help with allergies.