I guess you mean 'latex' paint (polyvinyl and polymer paint). These are 'built' chemical substances, of which many varieties exist. I've used both interior and exterior latex paints. The exterior latex paint seems to be of better quality, more suitable to cope with weathering influences. After a year it looked pretty much like new. I haven't seen it after five years, though.
PVA glue is a fairly simple wood and paper glue. Epoxy is a 2 part glue involving a hardener and an adhesive, which must be mixed carefully to get maximum efficiency. Epoxy will normally have a much stronger joint if mixed and applied carefully.
A sol is a mixture similar to a gel. However, the difference is that the mixture will flow. Examples are emulsion paint or PVA glue.
You can make sweetcorn PVA friendly by not putting it in PVA bags!
Actually it is a PVA glue. PVA stands for Polyvinyl Acetate.
No, PVA is not usually in wallpaper adhesive.
PVA is not commonly used on drywall.
No, PVA can not burn your skin.
- All white or yellow wood and paper glues are PVA based.
I need the formulation for Industrial PVA paint
No, if hardened properly PVA is a permanent glue.
PVA glue will probably make them sick.
Because PVA is the appropriate glue for wood.