I understand your mental image of the process, I just find it limiting.
It would have been if it was the only way of looking at the matter. It isn't, of course. I suppose that you were referring to the chain in a more metaphysical sense. That's also a way of looking at it, with its own possibilities and limitations.
You can consider the temperature of a bowl of soup and decide whether you like it, or it's on the hot or the cold side for the type of soup and the weather etc. At the same time, you can consider flavor, texture...It's not limiting to consider temperature. It's just one of many options.
However my point is that if editing is needed to match ones visualization, then the editing is part of that image's making process and cannot be broken and/or removed without also breaking the vision.
Very much so, and the interesting notion it brings is that in some cases (but not all), there's a tradeoff between, let's say, the 'chain' and the 'visualization process'. Some images may only be feasible to construct by a process that does involve a kinked or constipated (needs more fiber!) image-making chain. Mind you, I don't think that's a problem. It's a neutral observation, and it's this kind of turning the subject around in front of my mental eye that I find pleasing in an exchange like this.
I plainly said I was wrong; how is that an accusation? No fault of yours, brother. Compared to trying to communicate in keyboard English, photography is simple. ;-)
Ok, sorry about my misunderstanding!
I don’t have any photographic projects happening at the moment, but when I do I always have some ground rules in play before heading out to make images.
Thanks for bringing this notion to the table as well; I think it's worthwhile highlighting these two questions:
1: If you think in terms of rule sets or frameworks (as suggested also by
@runswithsizzers), to what unit do they apply? For instance,
@runswithsizzers suggested applying them to digital vs. analog captures. You,
@warden, propose here the possibility of a project-based approach. I guess we could extend this with a couple of other obvious possibilities, like one approach for all of one's work, vs. the other extreme: a new approach for every single image.
2: You bring up the matter of consistency, which we hadn't touched upon before. I suppose there's a set of tradeoffs involved here as well. For instance, I could argue that every image in principle could demand its own, unique process of visualization (thanks
@Vaughn). But consistency would suffer. Then again, the relevant unit of analysis for evaluating the final outcome may not be the individual image. I admit that I generally don't really think in terms of series or projects, but lean towards an n=1 approach: one image at a time.
3: There's the matter of time or order: deciding on an approach beforehand, vs. post-hoc. Provided you can decide beforehand what the process will/should look like, how does it affect the outcome? Does it make any difference compared to the situation where you end up deciding on the exact same process only after you've captured the images?
More food for thought; I like that. It's a woolen sweater with a lot of loose ends sticking out that we can pull.