I understand its best to go very light and sparingly to avoid running.
NEVER spray blush eraser/remover etc. directly on the surface! You will overload the surface with solvent and end up with a runny mess.
Mist it at least 18-24" above the surface and mist it at a 90-degree angle. letting it drift down onto the problem area. Mohawk/Behlens (same thing) and other anti-blush products are slower-drying solvent blends with a small amount of lacquer resin (nitro or acrylic - doesn't matter, they are compatible with each other - many lacquers are nitro/acrylic blends.).
Blush is simply trapped moisture resulting from spraying coats too thick or when the humidity was over the manufacturers' specifications. Usually it's a combination of problems - since lacquers do NOT cure and dry only by evaporation, keeping each coat thin - especially in marginal conditions - is absolutely critical. Each coat should be VERY thin and consist of 3 very. very light passes; a single coat doesn't flow together - "flow" and coverage doesn't occur until the 3rd or 4th coat.
NEVER spray lacquer like you would spray paint!
As an example, I've been doing finishing work for 50 years and live in Southern California, where conditions are generally more favorable. But this year was typical - from around November 1 until now Dec 10) I've had about 6 days of favorable "open garage" spray conditions (in a garage with no gas water heater - even with an open door spraying with one in the area is literally playing with fire.).
I used to have a booth, explosion proof/hard-wired fans and dehumidifiers when i was spraying daily, but now i just do my own stuff and a few favor jobs. But now I check the temp/humidity daily several times and only spray when I can. I was also in the coatings business for decades (this stuff was side gig) and understood measuring coating thickness to the point where I could do it by feel. Usually.
But done right - and with conventional lacquers, not lacquer enamel blends like Colortone and Deft - I could spray a guitar in 2-3 days (not including fillers if needed), buff it out the next day (no finish sanding - that's done only if there are problems) and it'd be good to go.
If you get blush after several days it's a strong indication that one or more coats were too thick, even if sprayed in just-below-the-limit conditions. Blush will occur immediately or within 12 hours or so if the coats are proper thickness.
Hope that's helpful.