Brad and dilip:
Thanks for your replies. I've posted this in a few forums because I'm a bit desperate to sort things out tonight, and based on all the replies I think I've come up with a plan. Assuming the framer can separate the prints from the mounting board (I'm hopeful of this, because he thought he would be able to remount them) I'm going to ask him to mat the prints and remove the paper backing from the frames. This will hopefully allow some air flow, and alleviate concerns about whether the mounting will hold up. Any additional thoughts still welcome, thanks again to all who replied.
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Your problem is well documented. The ink base contains ethylene glycol type substances to stop the ink from drying up in the Epson piezo heads. You can either interleave the prints with an absorbent type blotter paper (overnight at least) or leave the prints out to slowly air dry. EEM paper is not as big a problem as the plastic photobase type papers, since it is paper based and breathes from both surfaces, and absorbs the glycols into the base. But the sun has probably exacerbated the problem. The condensation on the glass is not water, or it would eventually evaporate in the sun, even a closed frame breathes. Of course, the adhesive might also contain something that is outgassing, but we don't use sprays, so I can't comment about that.
Additionally, how you mount your prints is a matter of taste and fashion, and seems to cycle with the decades. Hinging and floating is great for smaller prints, but large prints will eventually buckle no matter how they are hinged, since humidity changes expand and contract the print, but the hinged area is fixed to a backing that expands and contracts at a different rate. Many artists like the hinged look, especially with matte cotton fiber papers. Gloss photobase is more problematical, since it really shows glossy ripples that distract from the image. Even semi-matte photobase paper ripples are irritating to most artists. I have a client that first had the framer float (hing) 44" x 54" Epson Premium Semimatte prints, but the ripples were so distracting they finally had the prints mounted 100% flat. This can look "ironed flat" and yucko, or done properly can be very nice.
But "The guy who did the framing said that the prints could not be dry-mounted because of being printed on matte paper, so they had to be "spray-mounted"(?)." is incorrect. EEM is easy to drymount in a vaccum drymount press because it 'breathes", unlike plastic base papers. However, the best method is not drymounting, but using a roller laminator. In your case, using EEM, a PSA type archival acrylic mounting material would have to be used. Vancover must have a local pro photolab (sign shops also have this equipment) that can do mounting only for you or your framer. Smaller prints on breathable paper can even be done by hand using a squeege or hand roller- air bubbles will disappear in a day to two. Spraying adhesive is a formula for ill health and getting adhesive on the image side. I recommend taking it to a shop. The cost varies wildly, $6 to $20 a square foot, depending on PSA brand/type and city. Check to make sure the adhesive is archival acrylic; as the cheapest PSA are often rubber base for temporary advertizing posters. The most expensive are for front mounting directly to plexi, which you don't need. A moderate cost good brand/type mounting PSA is Mactac IP5000 or various Seal types. We have 62", 24, and 12" GBC machines, just so you know I have first hand knowledge.
Hey, how about posting a link to your show if you put it online?
Congratulations