You can purchase both oil and water based interior paints. Usually the oil is used on trim, doors and any surface that requires frequent cleaning, while the water based coatings are used on walls.
No, tempera uses egg as a binder and watercolors use gum arabic.
yes... i believe so.
It is paint mixed with pigment in such a way that all components are water soluble. We used to get paint kits with 8 to 10 colors that you would use a wet paint brush with.
. Acrylics ARE water based.
Generally, water based paint dries faster.
The short answer is yes. If they are both of the same base (latex, oil, acrylic).More important how ever is where the paint is. If you are working out of doors, go right ahead, if however you are intending to paint an exterior paint over interior paint, indoors, then please do not do it.Exterior paints have a number of chemicals that make them more suitable to exterior conditions, and a lot of them are not good for you. The out-gassing process takes a lot longer and exposes you to potential harm.
In interior or exterior house paints.... Acrylics, emulsions and latex are, oils, lacquers and shellacs are not. In artists' paints... acrylic, watercolour, gouache, and some water based airbrush paints are, oils are not..
Water based paint with a satin finish. This paint type looks the best on interior walls, in my opinion. The water based paint makes for easy clean up as well.
Yes, as long as they are both oil based or both water based.
yes.
yes
It is paint mixed with pigment in such a way that all components are water soluble. We used to get paint kits with 8 to 10 colors that you would use a wet paint brush with.
. Acrylics ARE water based.
Generally, water based paint dries faster.
Yes. Clean and degloss the oil based paint, apply an oil based primer, then apply the water based paint.
Because paint thinner is also oil based and water is not.
Water based paint does very well on plywood. The finish depends on the type of paint.
Yes, you can, That's the normal way.
The short answer is yes. If they are both of the same base (latex, oil, acrylic).More important how ever is where the paint is. If you are working out of doors, go right ahead, if however you are intending to paint an exterior paint over interior paint, indoors, then please do not do it.Exterior paints have a number of chemicals that make them more suitable to exterior conditions, and a lot of them are not good for you. The out-gassing process takes a lot longer and exposes you to potential harm.