Originally Posted by
Manfred M
I have had this argument with some long time, expert artists, especially ones with a strong darkroom background. It is an approach I strongly disagree with. There is little practical reason to do so, as adjustment layers take up very limited additional storage and storage is becoming cheaper all the time. I have yet to hear a convincing argument as to why one should do this. In your past working career, would you have thrown out all the background data in a case file? In my working career, it was always critical to have all the backup on how and why certain decisions where made and in some certain circumstances, I could face severe legal sanctions for not having backup for the technical decisions that were made.
Throwing out "final" data I have spent considerable time and effort on makes no sense whatsoever. I'm someone who even saves complex selections, just in case I find I have to go back and tweak something. If nothing else it provides me a record of how I approached a particular image I can return to in the future.