Originally Posted by
Manfred M
Richard / Dan / Bob - I think the question is all about what "good enough" and that is highly dependent on both the photographer, the audience and the photographic genre as well as the personal style of the photographer. When you are making prints for yourself, you are the only one who can decide what is "good enough". The moment the audience is someone other that the photographer, that has to be taken into account.
There are also "fashions" in photography; as an example the Vaseline on the lens filter is something that was popular decades ago but I have not seen a lot of this technique over the past 25 years. There are far better tools in the digital photographer's toolbox to soften the look. Softness is something that has long been associated with photographing women, especially in the glamour and portraiture genres, regardless of the age of the subject.
A look / finish that works well in glamour is likely not going to work in a industrial photograph. Something very hard and crisp is more likely to work in this genre.
We also have to look at different levels of print making. The SmugMug example Richard has pointed out is the same level of quality we see from many of the mass-market print houses. They are primarily aiming at the retail market and the results they provide are effectively the same that we saw from commercial photo labs in the film days. Minor corrections on exposure and colour balance was as far as things went. These print houses use the inexpensive chromogenic processes that are a modern iteration of the dye-coupled, chemically processed papers that we saw from the likes of Kodak, Fuji, Agfa back at the turn of the century. These are not quality prints, but that has more to do with the prep work than the printing-making process. I have seen some absolutely stunning chromogenic prints.
If anyone has watched people in a gallery (whether they are looking at photographs or paintings) tend to examine works from distance and closeup. While we are taught that we should learn to appreciate art from a distance; the general rule of thumb is we should not get any closer than the diagonal of the image and ideally two to three times the diagonal, that does not stop people from pixel peeping or looking at the way that the paint brush or palette knife worked the paint. I find that viewers hold photographers to a much higher standard than they apply to painters...