Enough to cover the materials and a decent wage for labor. We have no way of estimating what that might be in your area.
Also, I'm not sure why the "vaulted ceilings" matter.
Some of the containers like cabinet and closets are made of card boards and also the stereos and sound boxes are made of board cards.T cards from magnatags.com are made of card boards.
You want to use canvas to paint on. You can also (weird as it may sound) use smooth wood boards, as long as you use Gesso (a white paint) to 'prime' the board.
It is less labor intensive for a customer who will be painting the board.
Lampposts, walls, ceilings, window frames, doors, skirting boards, road markings etc.FALL TREES!!! SUNSETS!!! SUNRISES!!! anything and everything with brilliant colors, like flowers! tropical birds!
lol you cant good luck it bs trying to find info on a original painting nothing but discussion boards and reprodutions pop up! My advice dont bother
It is believed that the first painter to use linear perspective was Polygonus, in 5th Century BC Greece. We cannot be certain because Greeks painted only on wooden boards, none of which survive. The first modern painting to depict linear perspective was Masaccio's "The Tribute Money" which was done in Florence, Italy in the early 15th Century. It depicts a new testament story.
boat yards would buy old rope cut it and place it between the deck boards before painting
You can try using denatured alcohol if it was latex paint. But it is probably cheaper and easier to just replace the vinyl cove base.
The plural of board is boards. As in "we looked at the drawing boards".
There is paint specifically made for painting Melamine boards, cabinets etc. I have used this and am very pleased with the results. It can be obtained at any major DIY store eg B & Q.
This depends of course on the individual house. If the house is fairly modern and built to the correct standards within the last say, 30 years then it will have at least 6'' by 2" ceilings joists and 3/4'' floor boards over them. The joists span over onto the adjacent walls and are spaced every 400mm. They are strong as you are likely to need them. When you see people and baths etc falling through ceilings on TV, this is just for entertainment value. Some very old houses may have used smaller sized joists but I've yet to see a ceilings struggle under weight nevermind collapse.
Near independence in 1947, there was a painter who used to write boards. When he got this news about Pakistan, he prepared a board with "Pakistan Chowk" engraved on it and fixed it at a roundabout which is still known as "Pakistan Chowk".