Sometimes, depending upon the fabric, how long the paint has been there and what kind of oil-based paint you were working with.
You may be able to use a lipid solvent, such as nail polish remover, rubbing alcohol or even paint thinner, if the paint is still wet. Please be aware that any of these materials may permanently stain, discolor or damage your clothing.
For paint that has dried, I think you are pretty much out of luck.
I don't see why not, many Fabric Paints are Acrylic, which means the're water based, I think there is an oil based Fabric Paint, which ever you deside to use, when and/or if you deside to put a finish coat on your project, make sure you use a water based finish with a water based fabric paint and an oil based finish with a oil based fabric paint. The only difference between Fabric Paint and Regular Paint is the fabric paint has an ingredient in it to make it washable.
oil based
Yes. Clean and degloss the oil based paint, apply an oil based primer, then apply the water based paint.
No, latex paint is water-based, not oil-based.
No, it is not recommended to paint acrylic over oil-based paint as the two types of paint do not adhere well to each other. It is best to use acrylic paint over acrylic paint or oil-based paint over oil-based paint for better results.
Acrylic paint is water-based, not oil-based or latex-based.
No, it is not recommended to paint latex over oil-based paint without proper preparation, as the latex paint may not adhere well to the oil-based surface.
No, it is not recommended to paint latex over oil-based paint without proper preparation, as the latex paint may not adhere well to the oil-based surface.
Yes. Clean and degloss the oil based paint, apply an oil based primer, then apply the water based paint.
Yes, you can paint over oil-based paint with latex or acrylic paint after properly preparing the surface.
Is the paint you're using water-based or oil-based?
No, acrylic paint will not stick well to oil-based paint without proper preparation.