hi thomas
i agree with you, the goal should be to make great negatives and great prints ...
what i was suggesting ( and suggested to do on page 2 ) is to print EVERYTHING that you can get,
even if the films are crappy, even if the negative isn't film .. everything ... ( crayon, charcoal water glass, cliche verre, ink &c )
while i learned an immeasurable amount working for a portrait photographer whose every negative was PERFECT ...
i learned even more when i was working with the dregs ...
the problem is, no one when they are learning to print has perfect negatives, they just their 2 or 10 years worth of crappy negatives
poorly exposed backlit under developed ... speaking for myself, i had at least 10 years worth (now its more like 30 )
there's nothing wrong about poorly exposing and processing film ON PURPOSE .. it teaches you about film too
if someone has a roll of film, expired, fresh, whatever, and they shoot crappy stuff on purpose, and process it wrong
it will teach them how the film reacts with light, and time, and developer, nothing wrong with that ...
most people take other people's word for things they never bother to learn anything on their own, i'd rather learn on my own,
since 9 times out of ten, people who dispense advice just regurgitate what someone else told them without any first hand experience.
on the internet and in forums especially ... and in "real life" yikes! i would say 90% of the people i would talk with
during the time i was teaching myself to print better, had no clue and they just spewed nonsense ...
and if i showed them a negative and a print i conjured from it they insisted i didn't, it wasn't from that negative, or some other load of BS ...
now i can pretty much print anything that comes into my hands, client work, or my negatives that obviously, considered by most to be pretty crappy LOL
every once in a while i still pick up semi-translucent trash from the street or recycle bin or a piece of glass smeared with something or whatever .. and make a print from it ...
YMMV