Folks, I don't know if you ever heard of this, but I stopped raising grain on stock wood with a damp cloth and hair dryer a couple decades ago and completely switched over to using acetone to raise the grain. That way, you never have to worry about getting the stock dry enough or too dry with a hair dryer. It is also much, much faster than using a damp cloth.
The way you do it is put on some chemical or even kitchen gloves, wad up some paper towels and press the wad against the acetone can spout and tilt it so it wets the wad of paper towels. Wipe that on the stock and wet the wad again as you work over the stock. The first caution is you need to be in a well ventilated spot and/or have a fan blowing across the area you are working to blow the vapors away in an enclosed shop. The second caution is you don't want to get an open flame close enough to set the acetone on fire. So don't light a cigarette and touch the flame to the acetone soaked wad.
Besides raising the grain and evaporating so quickly, the beauty of acetone is it leaves absolutely nothing in the way of any kind of chemical or residue on the stock.
I have used acetone on walnut, birch, beech, maple, pine, oak and other woods and there was never an ill effect of any kind. Thought some of you might like to try it.
Gus