The only figure you can get would be the amount of liguids, including resins and additives in addition to water. Check out the technical data sheet to determine the amount of solids in the paint. Everything else is liquid.
I do not know the answer that is why I am asking answer it.
Yeah nail polish remover works great on removing acrylic paint on shirts and jeans and any other fabric, but i don't know if acrylic and latex paint is the same thing; and you should test it out on an inauspicious area first to see if it will remove the color of the shirt it self before applying it to the fabric just to be safe =)
If I understand you correctly, you want to know if you can cover a latex paint covering with an oil based covering? the answer is yes. need to prime? only if you think the walls need priming. Rule is: oil over latex, not latex over oil without proper prep- alkyld primer or similar
Yes, you can use latex paint over poly but you have a few steps to do before you can apply it. First, whether the poly is oil or water based, you'll want to sand it to give it a tooth (something to grab onto). Make sure to wear a mask and goggles. Next, prime the surface you want to paint. You can fill any hole or fix imperfections over the primer but you'll have to prime those areas again if you do. After you're priming is done, you can roll out your paint. Quick note: if the poly is oil-based, I would use an oil based primer (Zinsser"s bin 1-2-3 oderless oil primer, white can with yellow flag on it). You can roll latex over this primer.
It wass invented in 1911
If you want to keep your paint color pure and cover your object and/or project with 1 or 2 coats, I wouldn't, it sounds like your trying to eliminate a step, I know they do it with stain and polyurethane but not with paint and poly. I think as long as its water-base poly & water-base paint (latex) its possible, try 1oz of paint, 1oz of poly and mix well and try it on a test piece to see if its to your liking. Good-Luck!
I do not know the answer that is why I am asking answer it.
Yeah nail polish remover works great on removing acrylic paint on shirts and jeans and any other fabric, but i don't know if acrylic and latex paint is the same thing; and you should test it out on an inauspicious area first to see if it will remove the color of the shirt it self before applying it to the fabric just to be safe =)
If I understand you correctly, you want to know if you can cover a latex paint covering with an oil based covering? the answer is yes. need to prime? only if you think the walls need priming. Rule is: oil over latex, not latex over oil without proper prep- alkyld primer or similar
Yes, you can use latex paint over poly but you have a few steps to do before you can apply it. First, whether the poly is oil or water based, you'll want to sand it to give it a tooth (something to grab onto). Make sure to wear a mask and goggles. Next, prime the surface you want to paint. You can fill any hole or fix imperfections over the primer but you'll have to prime those areas again if you do. After you're priming is done, you can roll out your paint. Quick note: if the poly is oil-based, I would use an oil based primer (Zinsser"s bin 1-2-3 oderless oil primer, white can with yellow flag on it). You can roll latex over this primer.
It wass invented in 1911
Put a few drops in a small cup, mix with water. If it mixes you have latex or acrylic. If it won't mix, or does so then separates it's oil based. -Experienced painters can tell by the odour.
There are different kinds of satin paint - you'd have to know if it was latex, oil, enamel, alkyd etc.
By testing it with denatured alcohol. If the paint comes off on a rag soaked with the alcohol, then it is water based, If not, oil.
you will i die , i know this because am dead .
You can use denatured alcohol to check to see if latex paint is on the wall. Rub a rag moistened with denatured alcohol onto the surface. If the paint melts and is removed by the rag, you have latex. If it just cleans the area, then it is probably oil. It could also be epoxy or xylene based, but that is rarely done in a residential application other than flooring.
You can remove latex paint with denatured alcohol. (You should be able to find it in a hardware store.) I do not know how denatured alcohol would react on cowhide. I would suggest testing a very small spot to check the results before proceeding with paint removal.