According to the 16 oz. sampler can of interior eggshell acrylic enamel that I am holding in my hand, it should cover approximately 25 square feet or a 5'x5' area-depending or surface condition and method of application.
According to my estimate - 2.5 Square feet per ounce.
One quart covers 87.5 sq feet. There are 32 ounces in a quart.
So 87.5/32 = 2.73. Rounded down to 2.5 to be safe.
Then again according to the 2 ounce sample size paint at Walmart, one jar covers 3 sq ft. Which would make it 1.5 sq feet per ounce.
1 gallon covers about 350 square feet, so a quart covers 1/4 of that or about 87 and 1/2 square feet.
One quart of most common paints will cover about 70 square feet
it covers about half a wall
.049 standiing up.
20
If your drum is a 55 gallon drum and your paint can cover 400 square feet per gallon then you may cover (one coat only) a square almost 150 by 150 feet.
2.81 gallons for every 1/100 of an inch thick. Most paints are applied at 4 mils wet, so they usually cover about 400 square foot per gallon. So you'd need about a gallon and a quart to cover 450 square feet.
A gallon of paint one coat will cover about 300 square feet; if surface is very smooth about 400 sq ft,and if very rough maybe 150-200 sq feet
Anywhere from 300-500 square feet depending on the thickness/thinness of the paint, how many coats you're putting on from a single can, and how large the surface is you're painting. However, 300-500 square feet is an approximate average of how much a gallon of paint should cover.
About 250 sq. ft.
One quart of paint nominally covers about 100 square feet.
It depends on a number of factors, including the density and viscosity of the paint, the porosity of the surface being painted.
400 Square Feet.
It is estimated that a gallon of paint can cover about 250 square feet of wall space. So if you only need to cover an estimated one hundred square feet then one gallon of paint should suffice.
The coverage of paint depends on the texture of the surface that is being painted. Theoretically, a quart of ordinary house paint, spread at 4 mils thickness on a smooth surface will cover 100 square feet. However, as texture of the surface increases, the coverage will drop. A quart of paint could yield 50 square feet or less on a rough stucco or corrugated surface.
root 484 ie 22 feet
An average gallon of latex house paint will cover 280 square feet
If your drum is a 55 gallon drum and your paint can cover 400 square feet per gallon then you may cover (one coat only) a square almost 150 by 150 feet.
2.81 gallons for every 1/100 of an inch thick. Most paints are applied at 4 mils wet, so they usually cover about 400 square foot per gallon. So you'd need about a gallon and a quart to cover 450 square feet.
Paint coverage differs depending on brand and type of paint. Most (if not all) paint cans will indicate that one gallon covers so many square feet. For example, Paint A says one gallon covers 200 square feet. That means 200 square feet will require one gallon, 50 square feet will require one quart, 400 square feet will require two gallons, etc.
A square unit is equal to 100 square feet so 2200 square units equals 220,000 square feet. One gallon of paint will cover approximately 400 square feet which means 550 gallons of paint are needed. If you plan on a double coat 1,100 gallons are needed. It will take 550-1,100 1 gallon cans of paint to cover 2,200 square units.
Square feet is a measure of area. You do not get paint by the area - you get it in a volume - a litre, or quart or whatever. The container will give a meausre of the covergae which will depend on the surface being painted - its porosity, prior traetment, etc. Furthermore, a rectangle is an area. A rectangle can be measured in square feet but never in cubic feet. A rectangle measuring 40 cubic feet cannot exist!