Yes, you can paint over XIM with any acrylic or alkyd paint. Read the instructions on the can for drying and recoat times.
Most acrylic paint will peel off like plastic once it is dry, hot water helps to loosen the bond, along with careful scraping the paint should come off. Next time spread newspaper on your work surface.
If the base coat used in your project is water base then yes, you bet you can. If there is any chance that the base coat used was an oil base paint then you cannot paint directly over it. The acrylic enamel will not adhere to the oil base paint and will begin to peel off as soon as it is dry. In which case a coat of primer is in order.
The short answer is NO, water based paints do not adhere to oil base paints. However if you are willing to lightly sand the oil base paint, and apply an oil based primer, you can then use water based paint as a top coat.
If you have painted latex over oil based it will peel of very quickly.
If you use regular acrylic paint it may crack and peel in the wash. Mind you, acrylic is pretty permanent on fabric, as you will know if you've ever accidentally spilled some on your clothing. To be sure of your end result, there is a solution sold in most craft stores (usually in the same place as the acrylic craft paints) that can be mixed with your paints to make it more durable on fabric. I've been using it for years and have had excellent results.
Most acrylic paint will peel off like plastic once it is dry, hot water helps to loosen the bond, along with careful scraping the paint should come off. Next time spread newspaper on your work surface.
the high gloss acrylic would bead up and not give you an even application over the oil based
If the base coat used in your project is water base then yes, you bet you can. If there is any chance that the base coat used was an oil base paint then you cannot paint directly over it. The acrylic enamel will not adhere to the oil base paint and will begin to peel off as soon as it is dry. In which case a coat of primer is in order.
The short answer is NO, water based paints do not adhere to oil base paints. However if you are willing to lightly sand the oil base paint, and apply an oil based primer, you can then use water based paint as a top coat.
Nine times out of ten? Moisture under the surface of the paint. Unless the moisture problem is cured, the finest paint will "peel" over time.
If you have painted latex over oil based it will peel of very quickly.
If you use regular acrylic paint it may crack and peel in the wash. Mind you, acrylic is pretty permanent on fabric, as you will know if you've ever accidentally spilled some on your clothing. To be sure of your end result, there is a solution sold in most craft stores (usually in the same place as the acrylic craft paints) that can be mixed with your paints to make it more durable on fabric. I've been using it for years and have had excellent results.
It would more than likely peel in sheets once cured. You can however begin with an acrylic/latex primer and then paint it again with an acrylic/latex paint. Sanding the oil coating will aid in adhesion, and wiping down with a degreaser is sometimes necessary in kitchens, or nicotine polluted rooms. Or any room with condensation issues.
In such a situation the bond has three potential points of failure:The paint could peel off metal piece 1.The paint could peel off metal piece 2.The bond between paint 1 and paint 2 (the glue you just used) could fail.If any of those three goes, the bond fails, so it's only as strong as the weakest of the three.That said ... sure, you can do it.
The two most popular types of paint for interiors is Oil or Latex. Since you're asking about acrylic paint I would assume you are wanting to paint on the walls. You can buy interior interior/exterior paint at Lowe's, Home Depot, Ace Hardware, etc. If you're asking can you use acrylic, tube type, paint on the walls, yes, you can. But, make sure you're walls have been pre-primed/painted with latex paint before doing so. I've done a few murals with cheap tube paint, such as Apple Barrel and the Michaels store brand paint, and the pictures turned out wonderful. Always remember that you CAN paint oil over latex, but not latex (acrylic) over oil. The paint will peel. Another thing to keep in mind: if you are going to paint a kitchen or bathroom make sure you use no less than a satin paint, preferrably a semi-gloss; you can't wash flat or eggshell and if condensation occurs you may see water lines form in the paint. Hope this helped! Have a nice day!
Painting shoes with acrylics will likely just create a skin that will easily peel off. Acrylic is plastic. It won't stick to the shoes.
No. When acrylic paints dry, the water has left the paint. Once that happens what's left behind sets and binds together so that it won't peel or chip etc off the walls. Nothing can change that process if that makes any sense. Hope so !