My films are essentially free of surface liquid when set to dry, so there is no “puddling” of water. Sheet films are leaned as described above. Roll films are hung using two “high-tech” devices—a couple of spring-type wooden clothes pins as used on clothes-drying lines, one to hold the top of the film to a string line, and the other clipped to the bottom to weight the film so that it hangs straight down.
I begin by carefully cleaning my plastic surfaced countertop. I use a scrupulously-clean sponge used only for film wiping. It’s wetted and wrung out as dry as possible. The film is wet with a water + Photoflow solution at this point, unless it's color film. Stabilizer is the last liquid to bathe my color films.
I lay the film emulsion-down on the countertop and lay the sponge on the top (base side of film) and very slowly draw the sponge over the film with no downward force, just the weight of the sponge. Keeping the movement of the sponge very slow allows it to absorb nearly all of the liquid, except for "micro drops".
I lift the film from the countertop and hold it in one hand while wiping the countertop dry with a towel with the other hand. Then I lay the film base-side-down on the countertop and repeat the sponge-wipe of the emulsion side, moving the sponge even slower than I did with the base side to ensure as much liquid removal as possible.
At this point the film surface has only micro-droplets remaining. I set the film to dry. The surface drops are too small to leave residue and the film is dry and ready for use the next morning. My film processing is generally done in the evening.
The sponge is carefully cleaned and allowed to dry. Then it’s srored in a clean plastic bag until its next film-drying use.