There's a recent thread about this subject ..... https://www.photrio.com/forum/threa...son-rc-print-drying-rack.202346/#post-2732241
I use white watercoler tape (wet water paper sealing tape) and that’s the only way in my view apart from an expensive press. You can buy it in an art supply shop.
I squeegee the print face up on a glass plate; plastic or acryl plates won’t work because they can’t hold the tape. Wet the tape on a wet cloth and attach the tape on all 4 sides and dry it slowly. You need a breadth of about 3-4mm tape over the printpaper.
If you dry it fast, in the sun, or with a hairdryer, it sometimes lets loose or the tape breaks. After drying it 24-36 hours I cut it loose from the glassplate with a stanley knife. The remaining tape on the glass can be washed away easily. I have the tape in two sizes, 1 and 2 inch, and I use them for resp. small or large prints (the shrinking of the paper during drying puts a lot of force on the paper).
This method leaves my prints always flat, other methods show curling after a certain amount of time and pressing it under a heavy book won’t help. Some people find this a lot of ado, but who said that analogue photography is effortless? A flat paper without waves and curls makes a big difference for the quality of the image.
Actually, the best way to get fiber paper flat is to use RC paper instead. Oh, wait, I think I just lit a fuse...
Dale
This method is used for wet painting, watercolour, acrylic, etc, but you might want to double check that your choice of gummed tape isn't adding acid to the paper.
Old, watercolourist used this method and I have too, however, to avoid confusion about the cutting the print free includes the margins of the FB paper and not removing the remaining tape from the print by way of moisture, in a water spray, sponge or wet cloth.
I leave the remaining tape on the FB-paper as it is and stick to the original paper size because it matches the size of my passepartouts
Have you tried Google? Worked for me.
And definitely, if you can, reach out to someone working in the field of photo conservation, preferably also in your general area, as they might be able to help you with specific materials that they deem fit for use. Alternatively, consider reaching out to the people at the George Eastman house.
Actually, the best way to get fiber paper flat is to use RC paper instead. Oh, wait, I think I just lit a fuse...
Dale
Ok,
I haven't done any printing on fiber based paper since high school but I want take it up again out of dissatisfaction with the tonal range of the RC papers.
So, two questions:
How do you get the darn things to dry flat? I have had, in the distant past, many bad experiences with dryers.
Does anyone still use ferrotype plates? If so, how does one use them? I long ago inherited 4 or 5 but I don't quite get how you use them.
Be sure to wipe any dust off the prints, front and back, before putting them in the press or the surface will be pitted.
I dry the prints on a screen, face up. Then in the dry-mount press for 2 minutes at 175º, immediately followed by 5 minutes under a heavy steel plate, face down. Prints are stacked and placed under a pile of big, heavy books overnight. It is the best method I have found to date. Be sure to wipe any dust off the prints, front and back, before putting them in the press or the surface will be pitted.
I totally see your point. Yes, we are dealing with heavier material with vastly different finishes on either side.The principle may work, but FB paper is typically double weight, which is several times thicker than poster paper. I think poster paper is generally around 80-90gsm, while FB paper is around 220-250gsm. Moreover, poster paper doesn't have a gelatin layer that'll contract during drying. So the approach would have to be modified to accommodate the far larger forces that develop in FB paper as it dries.
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