Originally Posted by
GrumpyDiver
Like a fiew others, George, I will also have to disagree, especially in the field. I have never been able to reproduce previous work, even when I think I have set up the same way. I can get the focal length, ISO, shutter speed and aperture settings from the metadata of an image. I can use an image to line things up as in the original image. Guess what; something will have changed; the light (quality, intensity and direction), something in the environment (the season?), etc. The same scene may need a totally different set of parameters to get a good (or better) image than the base.
I do sometimes take notes when I do studio work, but even in those highly controlled conditions, I can come close to reproducing my original image. It won't be exactly the same, but often more than good enough. Lights, modifiers, power settings, heights and distances from the subject can be reproduced reasonably well, but not exactly 100% right on, especially when I shoot tabletop work, rather than people. With people, I can never reproduce the exact same image either; even though I can control the room; expressions and stances change.
In fact, I usually analyse my work and continue with where I was going, rather than trying to make an exact copy of what I had already done.
I agree with Mike, Donald, Robin and Rob - the knowledge is far more important trying to use a "cookbook" approach. With knowledge one can create, with a cookbook approach one be a lot more constrained in their photography.