Thanks Harry. It looked on my easel to be even all the way 'round and I measured the space on each dimension. Also, I trying to match a print of unknown age, (drymounted w/tissue showing) and I didn't see the range in the print I was able to pull from the same neg using a common English made fiber paper. The older print, although nothing spectacular on it's own, seemed to have a greater range of tones... or I just really suck as a printer! One wouldn't have noticed the difference unless side by side but sometimes when printing nowadays it seems like I am working w/paper w/the tonality range of digital. =\ Eric ________________________________ From: harry kalish <hksvk@xxxxxxxxxxx> To: pure-silver@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Sent: Thu, February 3, 2011 8:50:51 PM Subject: [pure-silver] Re: Print Shrinkage Question and Adhesive Advice Yes, I have tried the same thing, and that much shrinkage sounds about what I have noted. But shrinkage should be more in one dimension than the other because of how the paper fibers are aligned. I would try rubber cement on your ruler. Apply a thin, even coat to both members and wait for it to get tacky before putting the cork to the metal. Clamp, but not tight enough to squeeze all the cement out. Harry On 2/3/11 6:16 PM, "Eric Nelson" <emanmb@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: I am doing a re-print and I want to use the unusable dry fiber print to size up with on the easel so it matches what I made yesterday. It seems that the print shrank 2mm in each direction making precise (architectural image) alignment impossible. Is that normal? I knew there was some shrinkage but never noticed this much. It's a 16x20 print. > >I have a cork backed ruler and the cork is separating from the ruler. Would >contact cement be a good choice to re-adhere the portion coming off? It's a >15" >ruler so it's has some flex to it. > >Thanks > >Eric > > >