"Paint Grade" is a quality rating on wooden mouldings, trim pieces, etc. These items are usually "Stain Grade" or "Paint Grade". Stain grade is the higher of the two, and the pieces can be finished with a wood stain and sealer for a satisfactory finish. Paint grade must normally be painted, because of minor blemishes and splices in the material.
If you mean SIDING, then yes you can. You should buy a high quality exterior grade latex eg shel. It will probably take two coats. I highly recommend Sherwin Williams 100 grade.
It is the paint, the color is just color and does not change the base paint. Depending on the grade of paint it may not cover as well as it would with color added.
paint it on the spreadsheet
Not applicable . No grade.
The paint itself will not damage the wood, but make sure that the paint is of an exterior grade. If it isn't it will start to peel quickly becuase of the oisure and sun exposure. the sun can be very damaging to paint so an exterior grade paint is a good option because it's formulated to withstand the effects of sun and rain. Worst case scenario you can use a paint stripper to take the paint off then sand the wood and it'll look like it did before painting.
23.00-36.00 depending on grade.
Use a block filler and normal exterior grade paint. Ask your paint supplier which filler is best for your region.
The laminated beams ( LVL) need to be painted to stop them delaminating.Marine grade wood sealer if it's weather exposed.
Most paint grade mill-work (mouldings, widow frames and doors) are not designed to be stained. They are created of many small pieces of woods, joined by something called a finger-joint. The wood-grains of the pieces, are not necessarily pretty to look at. For the best looking finish, it is best to prime and top coat paint grade mill-work. If you really want wooden mill-work, spend the extra and get good stain-grade mill-work.
'pintar' = to paint' 'pinto' = 'I paint'
Paint by numbers
Paint