Yes, you can
No and yes it depends
Estapol in a brand name for single pack polyurathane lacquer manufactured by Wattyl Australia.
No, you can dull satin or semi-gloss but not the reverse.
Semi gloss is considered to be the best of the two because of its ability to be cleaned a lot more easier.
That is up to you. The more gloss a paint has in it, the easier it is to clean and the more abuse it can take. For the most part, ceilings are only flat.
semi gloss
No and yes it depends
you can mix paint of different sheen levels provided they are of the same vehicle or base (i.e.. water based, oil based. Mixing a satin with a semi-gloss will still be reasonably close to an "eggshell" finish. The best way to know is to use the chart below and add the 2 sheen level percentages together and divide by 2.For example a low sheen (satin) is 20% sheen + Semi-Gloss which is lets say 50%20+50=70 divided by 2 = average sheen of 35% giving you an eggshell finish.Flat (1-9% gloss)Low Sheen (10-25% gloss)Eggshell (26-40% gloss)Semi Gloss (41-69% gloss)Gloss (70-89% gloss)
Estapol in a brand name for single pack polyurathane lacquer manufactured by Wattyl Australia.
Semi-Gloss - album - was created on 1997-06-03.
Sure you can!it will work just fine
If you have the required satin or semi-gloss base product and pigment, you can.
No, you can dull satin or semi-gloss but not the reverse.
Semi gloss is considered to be the best of the two because of its ability to be cleaned a lot more easier.
Semi gloss would stand up to weather better.
Semi-gloss paint most times exposes the metal of your car. It can lead to rust and erosion issues. Gloss paint is definitely the way to go.
By using rubbing compound