To a degree, but if you are concerned use lacquer thinner.
Lacquer thinner evaporates quicker. It is cleaner or leaves less of a film than paint thinner. Lacquer thinner will thin most solvent based paint but paint thinner shouldn't be used to thin Lacquer. Lacquer dries from the surface painted out and enammal dries from the surface of the paint down to the surface painted. Using the wrong thinner affects how the paint dries and may affect the final finish.
Lacquer thinner has no sheen. It will thin any lacquer or enamel and imparts no gloss or change of that nature.
Urethanes react with water and alcohols. To use lacquer thinner you need to be sure that it contains no IPO or IPA. Cheap lacquer thinners probably contain mainly toluol xylol and ketones; these should be OK. Just thin a little urethane lacquer and its hardener with the lacqer thinner and let it stand or apply to a small test patch. If it froths or goes funny in any way; forget it
The solvent for varnish is lacquer thinner, but I cannot speak to what the lacquer thinner might do to the woolen item.
Scrub it with lacquer thinner, then apply a good metal primer.
Yes, you can use a lacquer thinner on carbon fiber. However, when doing so, make sure you water the thinner down first or add it to a solvent.
Lacquer thinner will possibly remove it, chemical stripper will definitely remove it.
Lacquer thinner.
Lacquer thinner will thin many types of oil based paint, but not all. -Experiment with a little first.
yes, mixture of 1/2 clear lacquer and 1/2 lacquer thinner. You can also use polyurethene spray
Varsol, oil thinner, turps, lacquer thinner, xylene, and many others.