I find my little canvas dryer to be pretty handy for smaller prints. Two issues though:
Many people fear fix buildup in the canvas;
Lightweight and even some heavier papers can get a "ripply" edge - the kind of thing a dry mount press tends to solve.
Months ago I posted instructions to remove and wash the canvas - in that thread, someone (I believe it was chemistry god Photo Engineer) suggested that the steam escaping the print essentially "washed" the canvas anyway. I've also tried to find a release paper or paper layer that would press things a bit flatter. But anything I use isn't reusable, and many papers just wrinkle up. Matte board will just get destroyed.
So, if you're using one of these - just wash a chunk of un-primed artist canvas and dry it (so it gets its shrinkage out of the way). Or maybe two pieces, trimmed big enough to cover the whole platen. Stack it/them on top of your print, close the canvas cover, and smooth any wrinkles.
This has two purposes - it makes the canvas tighter and the pressure higher - even my antique copy-paper thin single weight fiber gets nice and flat. And... you can wash those canvas pieces to your heart's content. Really made my cheap little dryer much more effective.
Many people fear fix buildup in the canvas;
Lightweight and even some heavier papers can get a "ripply" edge - the kind of thing a dry mount press tends to solve.
Months ago I posted instructions to remove and wash the canvas - in that thread, someone (I believe it was chemistry god Photo Engineer) suggested that the steam escaping the print essentially "washed" the canvas anyway. I've also tried to find a release paper or paper layer that would press things a bit flatter. But anything I use isn't reusable, and many papers just wrinkle up. Matte board will just get destroyed.
So, if you're using one of these - just wash a chunk of un-primed artist canvas and dry it (so it gets its shrinkage out of the way). Or maybe two pieces, trimmed big enough to cover the whole platen. Stack it/them on top of your print, close the canvas cover, and smooth any wrinkles.
This has two purposes - it makes the canvas tighter and the pressure higher - even my antique copy-paper thin single weight fiber gets nice and flat. And... you can wash those canvas pieces to your heart's content. Really made my cheap little dryer much more effective.
