... When an individual chooses to avoid certain techniques, like burn and dodge or bleaching, they limit their options, they force compromises.
<< to avoid? >> No Sir, is not avoiding, the individual decision is "to use" (or not) certain techniques (before & after), got nothing to do with "stay away / scape / evade / duck or elude doing ...", no Sir, nothing
<< They limit their options?, They force compromises? >> Once again, absolutely no Sir, by doing so (choose to use, or not to) they just decide what they need as the final result, and that could be with or without adding further frills.
The most common problems I hear of from people who avoid burn and dodge are of blocked up shadows and blown highlights. Sure they can still "fix" the offending problem with say n-1 development or softer paper, but that forces a compromise with the rest of the photo and then they typically complain about flat, lackluster mid tones.
The laws of nature aren't optional.
I'm sorry for that people Mark, but to my way of thinking, they should "fix" those common problems trying to get a new fresh better negative (having fun with the laws of nature) and not by tinkering around with a lacklustre material.
We normally use paper as the final display medium, right?
But that being so (normally) can never justify a poor negative, never. I insist, the negative is not a intermediate step, and the print is not always the final, although both can be licit and perfectly adopted for many people the other way around.
