No, because the solvent must go through the surface to evaporate completely before the paint will be fully cured.
The solvent evaporates and leaves behind the pigment behind.
The best way to make a paint job is last to prepare the surface well and use the right coating. The solvent acts as a delivery system for the paint, evaporating as the coating dries, leaving the binders and pigment on the wall. A primer should be used any time to paint. In fact, priming is one of the most important things to do, aside from being sure the surface, to ensure a lasting job.
What dries fast is not so much the paint, but the fresh plaster on which the fresco paint is applied. And as the plaster dries the paint unites with it.
Only if it dries out.
its a solvent
Because it's binder or solvent base evaporates.
The solvent evaporates and leaves behind the pigment behind.
The best way to make a paint job is last to prepare the surface well and use the right coating. The solvent acts as a delivery system for the paint, evaporating as the coating dries, leaving the binders and pigment on the wall. A primer should be used any time to paint. In fact, priming is one of the most important things to do, aside from being sure the surface, to ensure a lasting job.
Latex paint weighs about eight to nine pounds per gallon. Oil base paint is slightly lighter. These weights are wet, when paint dries on a surface it will weigh considerably less.
That's complicated. The wood is simply covered up, so that's a physical difference. Application of the paint is also physical, you are just putting it somewhere else. What happens as the paint dries depends on the type of paint. Evaporation of the solvent is also physical, but as gloss paint dries chemical changes happen to produce the permanent skin.
What dries fast is not so much the paint, but the fresh plaster on which the fresco paint is applied. And as the plaster dries the paint unites with it.
Assuming that you mean an oil based enamel, it's because the surface is too hard and smooth for the latex paint to adhere. You'll need to sand the surface to create small gouges for the paint to flow into to so that when the paint dries, it has something to hold on to.
No, because the paint simply sits on the surface of the wood, and there is no change to the molecules in the wood. Therefor, it is a physical change, until its dries then its a chemical change.
Divide 60 lbs of solvent by 75 gal of paint to find how much solvent per gal of paint, then multiply by 90 to find how much solvent you need for 90 gal of paint: 60 / 75 = .8 lbs solvent per gal of paint; .8 x 90 = 72 lbs of solvent needed for 90 gal of paint.
Ochres can be used to make an oil paint that dries quickly and covers surfaces thoroughly. They are used on frescos.
Only if it dries out.
paint drying in sun