what i did was take the shirt and put in a full sink for 24 hours with dish soap then take it out and really quikly take a towle pinch real hard and pull it off keep pinching and pulling until its off !
If you have stains from a children's watercolor set, pretreat them and throw the clothes in the washer on a hot water cycle. Adult watercolors depend more on the concentration. If you have very dilute amounts of the paint, just pretreat and throw in the washer. If you have very concentrated paint on your clothes, rinse as much of it away as possible before you pretreat and wash them.
Answer I have used nail polish remover before with good results.
Also if you combine nail polish remover, Windex, and hair spray, and put it on the stains it should come out.
Yeah nail polish remover works great on removing acrylic paint on shirts and jeans and any other fabric, but i don't know if acrylic and latex paint is the same thing; and you should test it out on an inauspicious area first to see if it will remove the color of the shirt it self before applying it to the fabric just to be safe =)
If you use regular acrylic paint it may crack and peel in the wash. Mind you, acrylic is pretty permanent on fabric, as you will know if you've ever accidentally spilled some on your clothing. To be sure of your end result, there is a solution sold in most craft stores (usually in the same place as the acrylic craft paints) that can be mixed with your paints to make it more durable on fabric. I've been using it for years and have had excellent results.
Oil paint on canvas.
yes, I just tried it today and it works. It might fade after to many washes. But just dont spray to much in one area because the shirt then gets really hard and crusty. I suggest doing it on a plain white shirt.
Heres your answer: http://www.ehow.com/how_2285887_remove-acrylic-paint.html
if it is latex or acrylic paint, squirt hand sanitizing gel on it, then scrub the paint out with an old toothbrush
Yeah nail polish remover works great on removing acrylic paint on shirts and jeans and any other fabric, but i don't know if acrylic and latex paint is the same thing; and you should test it out on an inauspicious area first to see if it will remove the color of the shirt it self before applying it to the fabric just to be safe =)
If you use regular acrylic paint it may crack and peel in the wash. Mind you, acrylic is pretty permanent on fabric, as you will know if you've ever accidentally spilled some on your clothing. To be sure of your end result, there is a solution sold in most craft stores (usually in the same place as the acrylic craft paints) that can be mixed with your paints to make it more durable on fabric. I've been using it for years and have had excellent results.
Bleach the shirt and then let it soak in hot water.Bleach the shirt and then let it soak in hot water.
I heard it could use gas. I got same problem.
To remove oil stains you should pretreat the stain with a pretreatment spray or by rubbing it with liquid laundry detergent. Sometimes the heat of the dryer can set a stain. This means that if the stain was not removed after you washed it, and the shirt has dried, it may be stuck there.
It depends if you like to paint on a shirt or not.
fabric paint
you look at your shirt, go to the shops, but a shirt exactly the same and pretend it never happened.
I made my shirt by Silkscreening the logo in white paint onto a black shirt. :P
Oil paint on canvas.
There never really was, 'paint' it was all dyes that they used, for example, to obtain a red dye, beetles would be crushed to make a red pulp that would be thinned down, stained into a shirt, etc. and then dried For the matter of shields, the dye was left un-thinned and painted on as what we would call 'paint' today