If it's an oil base rub with Goof Off for 3-4 minutes, then wash in warm water
apply a little drop of gas in the painted coat
cooking oil works a treat
olive oil
Most glues will stick to gloss paint.
No. You must sand the gloss of and them prime and then paint. Semi and High Gloss is only meant for wood not dry wall. Its the worst idea ever to put a gloss on dry wall. Any paint with an Enamel is just as washable.
No, often high gloss paint is oil based.
I'm assuming your talking about house type paint and not something high end like car paint. If so, the answer is yes, but you must de-gloss it first to open pores in the old paint and give the new paint something to grip on too. To de-gloss, you can use sandpaper (150 grit and above is better) to "scuff" sand (just scratching the surface a bit, not really sanding anything off of the wall), or use a commercial de-glosser (such as krud kutter's "gloss off" etc...) which in most cases, you have to rinse off before repainting, but does do a more through job. If the old paint is really hard and shiny, you might have to de-gloss AND use an adhesive primer (also called "bonding" primer) first to insure your new paint sticks and doesn't peel.
Gloss. You can use any type of spray paint for spray paint art, but be sure it is gloss.
semi gloss
Most glues will stick to gloss paint.
Can I paint semi gloss over flat paint? Thanks!Barbara Phillips
No. You must sand the gloss of and them prime and then paint. Semi and High Gloss is only meant for wood not dry wall. Its the worst idea ever to put a gloss on dry wall. Any paint with an Enamel is just as washable.
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.
Yes, you can. You can always paint over with same paint.
No, often high gloss paint is oil based.
I'm assuming your talking about house type paint and not something high end like car paint. If so, the answer is yes, but you must de-gloss it first to open pores in the old paint and give the new paint something to grip on too. To de-gloss, you can use sandpaper (150 grit and above is better) to "scuff" sand (just scratching the surface a bit, not really sanding anything off of the wall), or use a commercial de-glosser (such as krud kutter's "gloss off" etc...) which in most cases, you have to rinse off before repainting, but does do a more through job. If the old paint is really hard and shiny, you might have to de-gloss AND use an adhesive primer (also called "bonding" primer) first to insure your new paint sticks and doesn't peel.
If the question is: What is the ratio of high gloss paint to flat paint sold, the answer is 57:33.
Gloss. You can use any type of spray paint for spray paint art, but be sure it is gloss.
the high gloss acrylic would bead up and not give you an even application over the oil based
Latex paint with a 60 degree or better gloss.