In any good craft or artist supply store you can purchase paints specifically made to paint on porcelain and glass.
Read and follow the directions carefully. There are some steps you have to follow to make the paint durable. Read the cautionaries carefully as not all paints are dishwasher safe or safe for use on surfaces you will eat off of.
Depends on the paint. If latex based, scrub it first with hot water, then put in washing machine. If oil based try scrubbing with paint thinner then Goof Off, then washing in cold water. If dried more than a day, most paint is impossible to remove.
If the paint is still dry, soap and water will easily take it off. If the paint has dried, wash with soap and warm water. If this does not take the paint off, use a small amount of acetone and then repeat washing with soap and water.
Yes, it is possible. You will need to get to a good Craft/Art supply retailer and find the paints recommended for painting on glass and porcelain. Next you must remove the knobs from the cabinet and clean them carefully to remove any traces of oils. Then paint away... the manufacturer will have instructions on the bottle for "setting" the paint. This usually requires baking them in an oven for a set time. Once this is done, just remount them and you have a whole new look. NOTE, this works best if the knobs you currently have are white as most of the glass/porcelain paints I have found are not completely opaque, and multiple coats increase your chances of streaks or other flaws in the finish.
DON"T try to scratch it off ! Use basic paint thinner and you may get it off without any scratching.
You can't without destroying the cardboard.
No, because the oil in the paint isn't compatible with the slick porcelain surface. It would be like pouring vegetable oil on a porcelain mask, it would slide right off.
Paint it in an oil based paint and dry it totally before getting rain on it.
You can if you don't mind the finish to be off of the floor with the rite equipment. Then try too match the finish back with porcelain. paint.
It could be beneficial or it could wear off the paint. It depends with what you wash your truck. Also, the kind of paint your truck has depends alot on whether the paint will wear off or not.
If it is vinyl tile and it's latex paint, rubbing alcohol will remove it. If it is a ceramic or porcelain tile, you can carefully scrape it off or if it is also latex paint, the same thing,,,alcohol will remove it.
try pressure washing it off. . .this should lift off that kind of paint or you can use acid wash for concrete
Depends on the paint. If latex based, scrub it first with hot water, then put in washing machine. If oil based try scrubbing with paint thinner then Goof Off, then washing in cold water. If dried more than a day, most paint is impossible to remove.
If the paint is still dry, soap and water will easily take it off. If the paint has dried, wash with soap and warm water. If this does not take the paint off, use a small amount of acetone and then repeat washing with soap and water.
Yes, it is possible. You will need to get to a good Craft/Art supply retailer and find the paints recommended for painting on glass and porcelain. Next you must remove the knobs from the cabinet and clean them carefully to remove any traces of oils. Then paint away... the manufacturer will have instructions on the bottle for "setting" the paint. This usually requires baking them in an oven for a set time. Once this is done, just remount them and you have a whole new look. NOTE, this works best if the knobs you currently have are white as most of the glass/porcelain paints I have found are not completely opaque, and multiple coats increase your chances of streaks or other flaws in the finish.
A rag with some Goof Off on it will remove any tape adhesive without damaging your paint. -I've tried it on 3 different popular cars, it works.
wipe off with laquer thinner
DON"T try to scratch it off ! Use basic paint thinner and you may get it off without any scratching.