Crushed seeds of mustard show greasy spots on a paper
Brown spots may be coming through the paint due to moisture or oil-based stains seeping through the surface. It is important to properly clean and prime the surface before painting to prevent this issue.
Grease spots in lipids are due to the hydrophobic nature of lipids, which allows them to repel water and form greasy spots. Lipids have long hydrocarbon chains that are nonpolar and interact with each other more than with water, leading to the formation of these greasy spots.
Only if you want liver spots and greasy elbows.
Fawns(baby deer) Have "white" spots on them because it fools predators into thinking that it's just the sunlight coming through the leaves
Dark spots on the Sun are called sunspots. (You knew that was coming, didn't you?)
Acctually Its Eating Healty For Example If You Eat Alot Of Oily Or Greasy Foods Its Causes Spots And Oily Skin.
Spots of oil in the driveway.
Your Anus!!
Only infant & juvenile White Tails have spots. The spots are a form of camouflage. They are meant to resemble the sun being filtered through the forest canopy and landing on the ground in a 'spotted' pattern. Hope this helped, if so, please 'Recommend Contributor'
To achieve a flawless finish on your walls with smooth plaster, start by properly preparing the surface by filling in any cracks or holes and sanding down any rough spots. Apply a primer to the walls before applying the plaster to ensure a smooth and even application. Use a trowel to apply the plaster in thin, even layers, working in small sections at a time. Sand the walls between each layer of plaster to remove any imperfections and create a smooth finish. Finally, apply a top coat of plaster or paint to achieve a flawless and polished look.
Not really, you've gone this far in your construction phase, why not sit tight and wait for the pool to be ready for plaster. The wet weeping will make the plaster not adhere and you could get plaster pockets away from the gunite wall. Remember the plaster does two jobs, it keeps ground water out and pool water in. You need to make sure that the plaster is applied under optimum conditions. This is not a tactic to not plaster your pool, it is a preventative measure to reduce problematic conditions in the future. You have to wait until the ground water is not coming in. This might mean waiting for weeks for dry weather. If it is next to a lake or something maybe they could put drainage in to drain the area prior to the water getting into the gunite wall, but this is extreme, it means more excavation around a pool that already has a finished deck. Waiting for the weeper to give up is more effective.