In such a situation the bond has three potential points of failure:
The paint could peel off metal piece 1.
The paint could peel off metal piece 2.
The bond between paint 1 and paint 2 (the glue you just used) could fail.
If any of those three goes, the bond fails, so it's only as strong as the weakest of the three.
That said ... sure, you can do it.
A masking fluid (there are many brand names) is painted onto your ground (surface you are painting on) as a resist to keep the "masked" areas paint free during the execution of the painting. Once you are finished the mask is rubbed off, revealing the area of pristine ground. This technique is commonly used in watercolor paintings to keep areas of highlight clean.
with the cleaning tools provided in the game. scrubber cleans. glue repairs. sandpaper removes glue.
try gorillla glue or another type of glu it might work.
Dante Lavelli went by Glue Fingers.
I'm sorry, but it's not possible to make a glider that flies like Aang's, but it's possible to make something kind of like it. # Get a long, thin piece of wood a bit taller than you. # Get 3 pieces of poster board. # Aline 2 pieces of the poster board together. # Cut it out the shape of one wing wile the 2 are together. That way you will have 2 wings the same shape. # Use the 3rd piece to make the bottom wing. Fold the piece in half and cut a half a triangle out. # Glue the first 2 wings together with a hot glue gun. # Glue the long piece of wood on the wings. # On the bottom, glue the 3rd wing on.If you want to make it easier to hold, get 2 more tiny pieces of wood and cut it so it looks like a handle. Do the same thing with the other piece of wood, then use the hot glue gun to glue them on.
A better choice would be an epoxy glue. Super glue is not perfect on wood, painted or not.
It's worth a try.
Use Goof Off to soften the glue, then try to rub it off with a rag.
A vinyl tile glue will do that -Mapei Ecobond, in Home Depot.
Use Goo Gone, it will remove it.
there are sticky pads use those
There is no metal that starts off as glue.
we use COPYDEX
Epoxy itself is glue that will hold to metal.
Adhesives work very well on most (if not all) metal surfaces as long as the surface is exceptionally clean and in particular free of oil or grease. A general key that can be used when choosing an adhesive is to figure out if what you are sticking on is going to be able to move slightly or not. Super glue is fantastic if it does not experience any hits or thuds. It does not budge, but a hit may crack it off. An elastic form of glue works wonders if experiencing thuds or hits. It just stay put, but can not hold as much weight over time as super glue can. Super glue is also known as Cyanoacrylate or similar names derived there of. as in removable. Metal surfaces can easily be cleaned free of super glue. A razor blade or a sharp knife can be used to scrape it gently off. Do not use super glue on painted metal surfaces. The paint would be the weakest link and it will come off with the glue.
Epoxies such as Araldite or J B Weld do a very good job of sticking metal to metal. To get a good joint on metals always make sure the surface is totally degreased and clean.
It would certainly soften glue, but you may be better using either carburettor cleaner, cigarette lighter fluid or nail polish remover.