KevinR said:
What about mindset?
...what about "I can just take that out later, or I'll fix it later"?
Does this bug anybody?
I think many photographer perceive the photo to begin and end in the camera. My mindset is that the photograph starts in my mind, and ends up as a print. The camera is just one of many tools I need to get from my mind to a print. I don't believe what goes on in the camera is more or less important than what goes on at any other step in the process.
With BW film photography I'm regularly in lighting situations that are low or high contrast. Sometimes I bring in reflectors or flashes to control the lighting, sometimes I wait until the lighting changes by itself, but many times I shoot with the idea that "I'll fix it later" in the development process by changing my development times. Or even when I go to print by using multigrade filters and multigrade paper.
I also like formats other than the typical 2:3 and 4:5 aspect ratio rectangles. If I see a scene that begs for square composition, but only have a rectangular format camera with me, I shoot it knowing I'm going to crop it into a square later. And of course the opposite, going from square to rectangle, happens all the time.
I also like making panos (like a 1:2 or 2:5 ratio) from 6x6cm, 6x7cm, and 4x5. I used to have a darkslide I modified that allowed me to shoot 2 2.5"x4" frames on a single sheet of 4"x5" film. Later I decided that: 1) it was sort of a pain in the butt, 2) film is cheap, and I ought to be using the best part of my lens (the center), and 3) if I shoot it full frame I have the option of all sorts of image shapes in the future. Some of my best panos weren't initially conceived in the pano format, they were shot full frame, but seemed stronger as a pano when viewed later.
I think it is a good idea to have personal rules and goals, although they don't have to be set in concrete. I believe it's fairly useless to try and impose them on others.
I think most folks would consider my BW pretty straight; I mess with contrast, burn, dodge, crop, and tone, but that's about it. What you saw at the time the photo was taken is pretty close to what the print looks like. I've had a DSLR for a week, and I can already tell that my color work is going to tend to be highly tweaked and edited. I prefer dealing with color in a more pictorial manner. To me I don't think of it as correcting things later, but just an extension of the creative process.
pictorialism
http://www.rleggat.com/photohistory/history/pictoria.htm