Might try Krylon Fusion aerosol paint. Specially designed for plastic. Have used on a Cherokee plastic grill.
Well, If it is called "Mirror Paint" I'm pretty sure that you can put it on there, if normal paint then i would recommend painting the frame instead of the mirror there is Glass Paint which i recommend you use instead.
If you are removing drips, it is fairly straight forward. Most hardware stores carry a little something called a paint scraper. It is a metal (or plastic) handle with a single edged razor in it. Gently slide the blade (at a flat angle) along the surface of the glass of the mirror and scrape of the drips.If you have completely covered the mirror with chalkboard paint, my suggestion is to buy another mirror. The time, effort, and frustration of removing that much paint is not worth what it will cost for the mirror.
No, what you see is what you get.
Perfect surface preparation and spray application.
Interior paint is more porous and less resistant to the elements than a paint actually devised to use outside. A flat paint finish or a satin paint finish is better outside, a gloss paint finish can also be used but only sparingly, as it reflects light and may highlight more flaws.
Go to your local parts tore and ask for a urethane bumper paint system. This may include 1 to 2 cans of paint. One being a prier and one a color can.
did the cherkees paint their faces
You can try Krylon Looking Glass Mirror-Like paint or silver spray paint.
Well, If it is called "Mirror Paint" I'm pretty sure that you can put it on there, if normal paint then i would recommend painting the frame instead of the mirror there is Glass Paint which i recommend you use instead.
yeah
1/2
Sand it down and re-paint.
Nothing
Yes it is
well if the mirror has a frame then you could paint it multicolored it really depends on who's room it is in because you couldn't have a rainbow mirror in an old man's room. So anything would do as long as it is in the right place
If you are removing drips, it is fairly straight forward. Most hardware stores carry a little something called a paint scraper. It is a metal (or plastic) handle with a single edged razor in it. Gently slide the blade (at a flat angle) along the surface of the glass of the mirror and scrape of the drips.If you have completely covered the mirror with chalkboard paint, my suggestion is to buy another mirror. The time, effort, and frustration of removing that much paint is not worth what it will cost for the mirror.
No, what you see is what you get.