This is signal processing in its widest sense.
Yes, I'm starting to see that. There are parallels with my images (especially early on,) with my early music mixes after my first purchase of a stereo bus compressor. At the time, I thought they sounded great, but after years at the craft, I can't listen to them. The compressor (or my rookie use of,) caused the mix to "pump." Horrible. But I did just connect it and turn it on. My ears weren't trained yet to hear the difference. My friends loved them (still do,) but ugh. The equivalent might be the urge to over-saturate (etc.) your image, but in reality it looks like a 4 year old playing with lipstick.
True, the better the signal, the less likely you are to mess with it. Recording (insert your favorite seriously talented artist here,) straight into a high end microphone and signal chain needs very little. A crappy singer recorded through a cheap mic isn't fixable, and the closer one might get making this poor singer sound better, the less natural it sounds.
To get better, you spend a lot of time learning how to not let people see your impact on the mix. I want people enjoying the song, not noticing how well the guitar "fits" into the mix. So you learn about the knobs for everything,
why things are applied (exactly Niall!) Gradually, mixes you used to kick out in an evening are now taking days. What do you do? You fine tune your workflows. Optimizing every step. You document hardware settings, anything to reduce the time, yet still produce a great sound. The same is happening with my "photon mixes." heh
My goal is to present images of our beautiful universe that appear untouched and "natural." This thread is music to my ears.
Jay