Polyvinyl Acetate (PVA) is a component of wood glue. It can stick a lot of materials together, but is primarily used by carpenters and in Arts and Crafts. You probably used it in school to make collages and the like, but probably know it as white glue, or Elmer's glue. It becomes transparent when dry.
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PVA glues will stick paper, cardboard and wood.
If this means to stick a jigsaw puzzle together, then YES, PVA or white glue is best.
no
- PVA, white or yellow glue soaks into porous surfaces, then dries as it's carrier solvent evaporates. The substance left after evaporation has become hard and bonds the 2 surfaces together.
No, it won't stick to sellotape.
PVA is designed to work on porous materials only. It is a wood glue and not for metal
An aliphatic PVA is a strong glue made out of polyvinyl acetate mixed with materials such as resin.
It depends what the ceiling is. Presuming it is artex, you would need to PVA it first, and then apply plaster... so PVA, and plaster.
By soaking into both parts and creating a secure bond as it hardens.
Yes, it would be good for that.
Mercury will not stick to most materials besides a few metals. Generally, like substances stick together, which is why mercury would not stick to the tube.
PVA Glue.