well its simple , ask joe curry the expert ! he knows all about all about oil stains and chinos ;) !
The difference between Wright Stain and Giemsa Stain is the intensity of the stain. The Giemsa Stain provides a better stain intensity than the Giemsa stain.
it is a basic dye that will stain the cells. That makes it a positive stain.
when stained with Gram stain Borrelia take up the counter stain which is carbol fuchsin or safranin and they appear as Gram negative spiral rods in gram film. In order to stain them the time required for staining them is little bit more as compared to normal gram staining. The initial steps are the same but once you apply the counter stain leave it for a while may be 5-10 mins depending upon the strength of counter stain. After washing the slide and drying once can see them on oil immersion lense.
stain
Methylene blue stain is used to stain plant and animal cells.
No, oil needs to penetrate the surface and the latex stain will inhibit that penetration.
Oil stain is for bringing out the colour in wood. -If you feel it needs a latex stain, just paint it over -I don't see the point.
No because latex paint will no stick to the oil stain. unless you sand the surface first then pain it
I am also looking for enterpris oil penitrating wood stain
There is no difference. They are one in the same.
Yes, you can
Yes.
No. You can use lacquer on oil too. Varnish will work well with oil stain as do any of the wax finishes
Yes! Providing that the stain in question is "oil based"! If the stain is LATEX then no. Oil based products will mix, but oil and water won't! Water being the carrying agent of latex!
The color
when you add cat litter to any grease or oil stain then minerals inside get the stain out
It depends on the stain. If it is a water base stain then no. If it is a oil or solvent base it should be fine.