Thank for that - now another stupid question - if I am drying paper face up toward the canvas should I remove the metal plate so that the paper just rests on the metal heater? Also roughly how long does it take to dry and what heat should I use?
Thanks
I have a couple of electric dryers, but my plates cannot be removed and I dont know if it best to dry on the heater or the plates, but saying that I don't know does not prevent from saying I would tend to dry with the plates on to insure even drying. I have one dryer that is double sided and I live in the desert, so I have very low humidity, the side that faces up drys single wt in just a couple of mints, double wt in 5 to 7. The side facing down does not have a lot of clearnce for air cirulation so they dry much slower. I usally load both sides, dry the side facing up, remove the dry prints, reload and then the flip over to fininish drying the bottom side. I only use my electric dryers for high gloss, and as noted getting a good gloss takes practice and some skill. I use chrome polish, the kind use to clean and chomre bumpers on older cars, to clean the plates, make sure the print is very wet, and allow to dry until the prints pops off the plate. For matt I use a set of screens.