No - oil and water don't mix. On top of that, it would ruin your paper.
No I don't think so. There are properties in the vegetable oil that don't work with oils.
If your brushes are pure bristle, they will benefit from final cleaning in oil after all paint is gone.
vegetable oil vegetable oil vegetable oil vegetable oil vegetable oil vegetable oil vegetable oil
YES
Vegetable Oil for the rice burner.
You can not put oil paint over latex paint. Oil is a rigid coating and latex is a flexible coating. When you put a rigid coating over something that is flexible the rigid coating cracks off.
Yes, put an oil-based primer on first as a bridge, then apply the acrylic paint.
Yes, you can put polyurethane paint over eggshell in latex or eggshell in oil.
yes if you pee on it
Just paint it on if the latex is adhering well.
It never’s unless.....you put it in a pan and put vegetable oil on it and you just have to stir it
No you can not.
Not directly. You will need to use a primer made to adhere to oil and will accept a latex topcoat.
For small amounts of paint and spatter, use a tablespoon of oil (vegetable oil is fine) and a mild abrasive (I use cornmeal) and work it over the paint. The oil will keep your skin from getting dried out and damaged and the cornmeal will work the paint spatters off your skin. This trick also take pine sap off. If you have oil based paint in your hair, use a small amount of oil or if there is nothing else around use peanut butter. Work it into the paint and carefully pull the paint from the hair (this works great for gum in a child's hair as well). Large amounts of paint will take a lot of time and patience, but will eventually come out. I future, before you start your project, put baby oil or lots of body lotion on your exposed skin and wear a hat with as much of your hair covered as possible.