Just use satin finish paint.
if your door is bare wood then yes u can .if panted in oilbase paint make sure u sand down n wash clean before applying a water based primer undercoat .then two top coats .upv paints r best.good luck.
If you not sure about what kind of paint was used prior to your paint job( an oilbase paint or waterbasepaint)and you want to use an acrilic or latex, always use a primer paint first to prevent blissering.
Underdrawing A underdrawing is the drawing done on a painting ground before paint is applied.
no
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.
if your door is bare wood then yes u can .if panted in oilbase paint make sure u sand down n wash clean before applying a water based primer undercoat .then two top coats .upv paints r best.good luck.
scrape off the lacquer paint first. by means of sand paper #100-140 before applying the latex paint
In pointillism, the paint it applied as small dots of colour to form an image.
If you not sure about what kind of paint was used prior to your paint job( an oilbase paint or waterbasepaint)and you want to use an acrilic or latex, always use a primer paint first to prevent blissering.
No. If you are talking about the interior, they have a paint that will do that. the exterior,below grade requires a rubber membrane applied directly to the concrete foundation.
You don't prime the paint, you prime what the paint is applied to.
If I wanted any clearcoat to make a paint shinier, I'd use a Krylon spray gloss varnish. Most oil based gloss paints are so hard and shiny they really don't need a clearcoat.
You're certainly free to do that if you want to, but before you start, you should know that any paint applied to the suspended 'cone' of the speaker will ruin its sound.
Underdrawing A underdrawing is the drawing done on a painting ground before paint is applied.
Elastomeric paint can be applied to a surface that has been previously painted with elastomeric paint. However, with each subsequent layer of the paint, the elasticity of the treatment breaks down considerably.
You don't prime the paint, you prime what the paint is applied to.
no