take paint brush, dip in red paint, brush over white spots ;)
sandpaper may work, power sander is faster.
Paintwork is the painted surface of an item, such as a car or a building.
It depends on what you are trying to clean off the car's paintwork. If you are trying to remove road tar yes, but WD40 will do the same and not harm the paintwork. If you must use kerosene try a small inconspicuous spot first, and wash off thoroughly with soapy water and then rinse well
spray WD-40 on the marks and they will come off not affecting the paint!
white vinagar or a scratch remover wax. good example meguairs scratchx
sand will only damage paintwork if it flicks up onto the side of the car if you want to avoid this go slowly
I wax my car firstly to protect the paintwork. If I don't wax it then oxidation and weathering can irreversibly damage the paintwork to the point where no amount of wax will make it shine nicely. I have seen nasty cars with faded horrible paintwork (especially red cars for some reason) and I never want my car's paintwork to look that awful. If I go to a car wash it will come out very nice with still the protective layer of wax maintaining the paintwork underneath
painting it over black
you buy paint protection
To remove egg from paint work you have to act fast otherwise egg will attack the paint,get boiling water or very hot water and a thick cloth just clean the egg off as soon and quickly as you can,i know health and safety but come on guys use your common sense i know hot or boiling water just clean the paintwork as soon as
i have dried white latex paint on car seat. what do i do to remove it?
The white film on the lens is a mixture of oxidization and,.. abrasive damage by dirt in the air striking the lens as you drive along!.... Any mildly abrasive polish (used for restoring car paintwork for example) can be used to restore this surface of the lens . Car lenses are made of 'lexan' which is a hard durable material, therefore,.... some 'elbow grease' or the use of a polishing buff is required to remove the pitted oxidized surface of the lens (white film) resulting in clear lenses!