Hi Sharon,
Everyone seems to have there own pet gasket - sealer combinations. The Four design does not have optimum head stud spacing or enough studs. This makes it a bit harder to get a good seal.
Denis Welch UK, has a very expensive three layer steel gasket for difficult to seal high compression engines. Likely not needed most of the time.
When I got the DW aluminum head, they recommended a cheaper sandwich gasket with copper on both sides. I coated the gasket on both sides with "Permatex Copper Spray-A-Gasket", let it set up, & torqued it down. Have had no leaks or need for retorquing after installation. Perfect sealing. I did use DW high strength head studs & nuts, along with hardened steel washers under the nuts. This combination is torqued to higher tension than original specs.
Some of this may be overkill, but the last thing I wanted was a headgasket failure or oil leaks.
Most important is to have the head & block surfaces level with NO areas more than .002" below the surrounding areas. If the head or block is out-of-spec things should be resurfaced. The block holes around the studs should be slightly countersunk to eliminate the possibility of a raised block thread preventing full, even, seating of the head or gasket. The studs should be very lightly set into the block to allow for slight length changes of the threaded part during heat expansion & to prevent raising the top block thread.
If you could find a "Fel-Pro PermaTorque Blue" composite gasket, it would require no sealer & they work very well. Don't know if it is available for your engine though.
You "may" be able to skip some of this elaborate procedure & maybe not. Doing it all will assure that you do not have to do it over in a relatively short time.
D