That depends on how good a job you want to do. Though they cost more, and they are a pain to clean with an oil based paint like Rust-Oleum, quality brushes (top of the line synthetics) give you the very best job, no matter what your skill level as a painter. Two excellent brushes I can recommend are Wooster Pro Classic and Purdy.
Rustoleum is made for painting metals.
If you choose a paint suitable for both. Rustoleum or Tremclad should do the trick
You can always go to MACO and have them paint your car. If you want to paint it yourself you can use Rustoleum and apply it with a paint roller or use a professional air gun.
If it is necessary to paint a hair-on cowhide rug, use spray paint for fabric. If latex or oil paint is used it will make the rug stiff and sticky.
I would experiment a bit first with mineral spirits and regular paint thinner to see which is better.
Rustoleum is made for painting metals.
yes you can. but it wont bond too great.... especially if the rustoleum is really thick. To help the paint to bond to it, sand it fairly well wit sand pads/paper or with liquid sander, or both..., or just use oil paint.
If you choose a paint suitable for both. Rustoleum or Tremclad should do the trick
you paint with it
You could use either Tremclad or Rustoleum spray. -Spray it with a primer in either range to start.
You can always go to MACO and have them paint your car. If you want to paint it yourself you can use Rustoleum and apply it with a paint roller or use a professional air gun.
oil based paint is better because it seals the wood
paint, a paint brush, paint brush bucket, and plastic paper for the floors so paint won't drip on it.
If it is necessary to paint a hair-on cowhide rug, use spray paint for fabric. If latex or oil paint is used it will make the rug stiff and sticky.
They use it to brush dirt off an artifact
First, wet the paint brush. Second, dab it in the paint you want to use. Third, paint the paper, wall, etc. you are going to paint. It's not that hard.(: WikiAnswers On!
I would experiment a bit first with mineral spirits and regular paint thinner to see which is better.