"If I buy the print, I get the negative, right?" Had a fairly long discussion over that one, and didn't sway his position.
"Three red dots?" I was allowed to exhibit some B&W prints in a local art club show and the question came from the resident dreamy landscape watercolorist hero who had single red dots (indicating a sale) on the title labels of his paintings, while one of my prints had three red dots. I smiled and said, "It's the nature of the medium".
After high school I went to a fine arts college as my first real step to being a photographer. My entrance portfolio was 4x5 contact prints with no drawings or paintings at all. They were made when I had access to a real darkroom for the first time (besides my parents laundry room where I had been developing negatives) and were made with about two months of printing experience. The teachers said I got into their colleges fine arts programme on the strength of my compositions, but that my printing needed work. I took the same portfolio to the head of the same schools photography programme and he said, "Your printing is good but your compositions are weak" I knew I had chosen the right path!
I once took my prints to someone who had seen some international acclaim as a news photographer and who just so happened to be in our small town. While flipping through my nature photographs he chuckled softly and said quietly to himself, "I remember taking photos like this"
I'm pretty confident in myself, thick skinned, and don't let others viewpoints dent my self worth, but that comment stung. A lot. It was only after ruminating over it for a few days that I realized it stung because there was a kernel of truth in it. They were pretty, controlled compositions in an easy-on-the-eyes style. There was no "me" in them, didn't necessarily accentuate what made me stop to photograph the scene in the first place, and were safe, tightly controlled compositions. I immediately launched into a balanced imbalance series of images and it changed the trajectory of my photography for the better.