no defonatly not if you are decorating you should get a babysitter to take him/her to the park or something!!!!!!!!!!
I would try the Best Cleaner Ever from ScraPerfect. It is effective and safe--for people and the environment. It removes spray paint and other kinds of paint and yet it has no fumes and is safe for skin. (It also removes adhesive and sharpie markers...) You can google it--there are lots of videos about it also.
No, on high heat guns as they vaporize the lead into toxic, fumes. A low heat Speedheater™ infrared paint remover does not. Chemicals make the paint waste hard to contain for safe disposal; dry sanding, dry scraping, and mechanically shaving require HEPA vacuums to entirely collect the toxic paint dust. Submitted by Catherine Brooks, Eco-Strip
House-painting or art-painting? Art would be perfectly safe. House-paints might be dangerous if they give off particularly strong odours - many paints have 'volatiles' in them, and these can be dangerous to humans if the area being painted is not properly ventilated. Water-based paints, such as emulsion, would be less problematic.
No, you can not use house paint to paint an oven. You must use a high temperature paint
You should never burn wood with paint on it unless you know, specifically, what kind of paint it is, that the paint is question is safe to burn, and that there is no other chemical treatment on the wood. There is such a thing as paint that is safe to burn, but you should never assume a given paint is safe. In particular, you should avoid burning wood with lead based paint on it, and much of the old paint was lead based.
It is not always safe to paint around a baby. The chemicals in the paint can irritate the baby, or the baby may have a reaction to the chemicals. Keep the room well ventilated as you paint so when you do bring the baby back home, the room will be aired out.
No paint with fumes is really "safe" to use around horses. Fumes can make their stomachs upset, or damage their brain. It is best to leave your horse far away from the paint until you have applied the paint and let it dry for a few days
yes but im allergic to paint fumes, rash etc. nothing to worry about unless your children are struggling to breathe or something.
No because your baby could get ill from the smoke and the fumes!
Latex is not as dangerous as oil based, but to be on the safe side you should work in a well ventilated area and ask your Doctor.
NO. If you smell any strange or strong odor that could be toxic REMOVE YOUR BIRD FROM THE AREA
I would try the Best Cleaner Ever from ScraPerfect. It is effective and safe--for people and the environment. It removes spray paint and other kinds of paint and yet it has no fumes and is safe for skin. (It also removes adhesive and sharpie markers...) You can google it--there are lots of videos about it also.
Not really, Check the paint to see that it is Non-Toxic, has no harmful ingredients, most do, so I'd really recommend you do not paint your babies furniture, just buy new furniture for your baby.
Probably not - I've never heard of it. I've heard of miscarriages being caused by breathing paint fumes - but the ones that say low odor are safe.
Baby Bath toys are made with safe materials, using safe paint and designs which will not create problems for babies and kids. Parents can leave the toys with babies and not worry about safety.
Good question. I know regular paint does so I assume that car paint would. My thought on this if there is a fume the possibility exists that it could. Better be safe than sorry.
NO as the exhaust fumes can kill you