doughowk
Member
At the risk of over-simplifying, the reason we set up the camera & tripped the shutter is because we saw something in the subject/scene worth recording eventually on paper/print. Maybe its conscious or sub-conscious, but we did pre-visualize something. The exposing of the negative is, ideally, to capture enough information to realize that vision of a final print. Our technical skills are tested by the various situations in which we photograph. If the information is lacking or overwhelmed by other information, our darkroom technical skills are required to still produce our original vision. Creativity as well as craft is part of the entire process for we are creating something unique - it may not match our original vision as we explore the potentials of the negative. One might even call the outcome a post-visualization process, though that term is identified with photographers like Jerry Uelsmann.
To sum it up, a perfect negative is that which contains the information you need to create your vision, and that information has to be readily accessible during the printing process.
To sum it up, a perfect negative is that which contains the information you need to create your vision, and that information has to be readily accessible during the printing process.