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Techniques for drying FB papers. |
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03-19-2012
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#1
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Registered User
timor is offline
Join Date: Aug 2010
Posts: 414
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Techniques for drying FB papers.
Gentlemen, can I have your ways of drying FB paper ? I need a bit of advise here. Thank you.
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03-19-2012
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#2
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Registered User
Roger Hicks is online now
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Aquitaine
Posts: 18,240
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(Fairly expensive, specialist) photo blotting paper -- NOT cheap 'blotch'.
Cheers,
R.
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03-19-2012
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#3
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Registered User
gns is offline
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 969
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squeegee, then air dry, face down on screens.
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03-19-2012
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#4
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Registered User
newsgrunt is offline
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Canada
Posts: 766
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try and find a Salthill print dryer and be thankful for small joys. will never give mine up
or blotting paper (get at good art supply stores)
never done screen drying but it's relatively cheap but space intensive
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03-19-2012
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#5
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Registered User
Beemermark is offline
Join Date: Jan 2007
Posts: 1,176
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The blotting paper and press is the best way. Think I still got one somewhere
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03-19-2012
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#6
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Registered User
Jockos is offline
Join Date: Jun 2011
Location: Sweden
Age: 25
Posts: 433
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Those papers are not meant to be dried.
Mount the pictures in an aquarium instead!
(yes, I'm also experiencing problems with FB paper  )
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03-19-2012
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#7
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Registered User
samuelphoto is offline
Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 100
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Quote:
Originally Posted by gns
squeegee, then air dry, face down on screens.
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Yep. Make sure the screen material is PLASTIC, not metal of any kind. By placing them face down, they will curl a little less. If curling is still a problem, then I would press them (after drying) in a Seal dry mount press between two sheets of heavy card stock. You don't have to do the entire print in one shot, you can do in in halves or quarters, for instance. It takes a little fiddling to the get the temp just right, but you'll figure it out quickly. Just be sure to to your figuring on some test prints, not your final work!
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03-19-2012
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#8
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Registered User
MartinP is offline
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Netherlands
Posts: 2,000
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You could take a few minutes to read through this rather long thread over at APUG.
http://www.apug.org/forums/forum37/5...aper-flat.html
I have tried the taping to glass trick, and this works. I also have a small heater from an old ferrotype-drier thing which works for drying 10"x12" prints, without using the plates. Previously I've also used a blotting book too.
Lots of ways work for someone, but what is going to be the most convenient for you depends on space and resources, same as everything else!
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03-19-2012
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#9
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Registered User
Steve M. is offline
Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 1,988
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I also like the art store blotting paper with tons of books loaded on them. Makes a good use for those heavy coffee table photo books that were looked at twice.
One of these days I'm going to try a water color technique, but you need a little margin around the print. Just staple it all around to a piece of plywood while it's wet, and hopefully when it begins to dry down it will shrink and become taut. Well, it works for water color paper. Not sure about fiber photo paper, but you never know.
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03-19-2012
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#10
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Shooter of Film...
nikon_sam is offline
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Alta Loma, CA
Age: 52
Posts: 3,767
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I bought a print dryer several years ago...best money spent on my darkroom stuff...
If the print isn't completely flat I place them under a stack of heavy books...
Been thinking of making a simple press for flattening prints...
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Sam
"tongue tied & twisted
just an earthbound misfit...I..."
pf
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03-19-2012
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#11
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May contain traces of nut
rxmd is offline
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Kyrgyzstan
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I like taping them to wooden boards or glass plates around the edges with wet tape. Essentially the same as the staple technique, except with less ka-chunk. It works well, and the slow air-drying will give the paper a beautiful broken sheen.
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Bing! You're hypnotized!
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03-19-2012
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#12
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Temporary upside down.
skibeerr is offline
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Melbourne Vic
Posts: 827
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Quote:
Originally Posted by rxmd
I like taping them to wooden boards or glass plates around the edges with wet tape. Essentially the same as the staple technique, except with less ka-chunk. It works well, and the slow air-drying will give the paper a beautiful broken sheen.
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+1
i use aquarel tape, the back goes on the glass.
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03-19-2012
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#13
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Jan Bielikowski
jbielikowski is offline
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Warsaw, Poland
Posts: 1,012
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Same as RC paper, on a piece of cloth. Then just let them lay half a year or longer under pile of heavy books and they gonna be flat enough to frame them.
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03-19-2012
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#14
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Shooter of Film...
nikon_sam is offline
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Alta Loma, CA
Age: 52
Posts: 3,767
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jbielikowski
Same as RC paper, on a piece of cloth. Then just let them lay half a year or longer under pile of heavy books and they gonna be flat enough to frame them.
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Then when you find them it's a nice surprise...and now they're flat... 
__________________
Sam
"tongue tied & twisted
just an earthbound misfit...I..."
pf
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03-20-2012
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#15
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Registered User
timor is offline
Join Date: Aug 2010
Posts: 414
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Thanks to everyone for the input. Now I go for search of the blotting paper. I hope art store may have it and as I understand, I should go for the best they have.
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04-30-2012
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#16
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Registered User
rjbuzzclick is offline
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: Minneapolis, MN
Posts: 415
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I don't have a lot of experience with FB yet, but I've been hanging up two prints clipped back to back (one clip at each corner), and it works pretty well. I use these little white plastic snack bag clips that have a small rounded rubber bump where they clip the paper. It leaves a very small indentation in the corners, but no discoloration.
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04-30-2012
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#17
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Registered User
43wahoo is offline
Join Date: Sep 2009
Posts: 1
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screen dry your fiberbase prints. Use dry mount press to flatten print
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05-09-2012
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#18
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Registered User
marek_ is offline
Join Date: Nov 2010
Posts: 43
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I hang them up on the washing line. Once dry and nice and curly I stack the prints up and place them between two sheets of mdf board. Two lengths of 1x2" timber on the top and two underneath and clamp together with four G-Clamps. I'll leave them for a few days - a week's even better, and they come out nice and flat.
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05-09-2012
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#19
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Registered User
Matus is offline
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Frankfurt, DE
Posts: 1,813
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I would only like to ask about the blotting paper thing- I have recently bought a blotting paper book (for this very purpose) and would like to give it a try. My question is - how wet may the print be before it goes in the blotting paper - does'n the emulsion side get scratched doesn't it stick to the blotting paper during the drying?
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05-18-2012
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#20
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Registered User
Findus is offline
Join Date: Feb 2012
Posts: 46
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Quote:
Originally Posted by rxmd
I like taping them to wooden boards or glass plates around the edges with wet tape. Essentially the same as the staple technique, except with less ka-chunk. It works well, and the slow air-drying will give the paper a beautiful broken sheen.
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That's exactly how I do it. Ilford mgw glossy air dried - delicious 
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