Hi all,
Timing the drying phase (dependent on conditions; 30 minutes min. - 60 minutex max. ...) and adding some glycerin to the coating solution (again, amnt. dependent on conditions; usually 1 or 2 drops per ml of coating solution is enough - when you need it...) works for me. If you need very fine control over color (I don't; I go for neutral results - don't print warm...) and/or your conditions are extreme (very cold/hot - very dry/humid), then you may opt for a humidification chamber a la Mike Ware. The time between coatings (min. 30 - max 60 mins.) is used for the exposure and processing stages; therefore there's no lost time actually. I don't like to force dry (hair dryer or any other kind of hot air supply) or humidify (e.g. vapor from hot water, ultrasonic humidifier...) the paper, causes inconsistencies for me - especially so when you use a vacuum frame and don't have an easy way of controlling exposure, such as when using a split back contact printing frame.
BTW, you have coating and clearing problems in that test print; I see some grainy and mottled areas (bad absorption and/or too thick coatings?) and a yellow base in highlights. How do you clear the prints?
Regards,
Loris.