Normally you shouldn't paint below 50 degrees, but with epoxy its more 'thick' and usually takes longer to fully cure/dry so it should be good till 40 degrees or so.
There are stains specifically intended to go over paint. Unless you used one of those, no, it will not dry properly.
Yes, you can put chalk pastels over acrylic paint. After acrylic paint is dry, you can use soft pastels over the paint so it won't crack.
The appropriate paint to use on a toilet bowl is an appliance epoxy spray paint. However, even that won't stick to the toilet bowl unless it is abraded and primed first. Drain the water from the toilet bowl and let it dry. Once it's dry, sand it until the surface feels gritty. Next, prime it with an acrylic latex spray primer. This prevents the epoxy paint from eventually flaking. Pain the toilet bowl however you'd like.
2 possibilities. First, if the previous paint wasn't rubber (ie epoxy), it will peel. ...or if this was the first coat, was it primed? Second and more likely, poor surface prep. Insufficient dry times before and after paint, acid residual, improper paint mixing, etc.
Normally you shouldn't paint below 50 degrees, but with epoxy its more 'thick' and usually takes longer to fully cure/dry so it should be good till 40 degrees or so.
yes as long as the paint is dry.
I would use an epoxy paint or possibly a very high quality enamel. I would also lightly sand the entire surface with 600 -800 grit Wet 'n Dry to get good a surface for the paint.
There are stains specifically intended to go over paint. Unless you used one of those, no, it will not dry properly.
Yes, you can put chalk pastels over acrylic paint. After acrylic paint is dry, you can use soft pastels over the paint so it won't crack.
No. Wait for it to dry to get a good adhesion.
The appropriate paint to use on a toilet bowl is an appliance epoxy spray paint. However, even that won't stick to the toilet bowl unless it is abraded and primed first. Drain the water from the toilet bowl and let it dry. Once it's dry, sand it until the surface feels gritty. Next, prime it with an acrylic latex spray primer. This prevents the epoxy paint from eventually flaking. Pain the toilet bowl however you'd like.
If this is a commercial setting, an epoxy or an oil based paint can be used to prevent water marks and drips. In the residential setting, a polymer type of paint can be used.
spray spray paint all over the light and let it dry. nothing special.
2 possibilities. First, if the previous paint wasn't rubber (ie epoxy), it will peel. ...or if this was the first coat, was it primed? Second and more likely, poor surface prep. Insufficient dry times before and after paint, acid residual, improper paint mixing, etc.
well you can add water to 1 paint and then add no water to another paint then mix together. THEN YOU CAN PAINT BUT GO OVER THE PAINT A ROUGH 10 TIMES AND THEN YOU HAVE SHIMMERY PAINT.
Wood veneer can be painted over on kitchen cabinets. The paint should be a latex that is not of acrylic nature. Oil paint will only smear and not dry evenly.