Open slit spectra of planetary nebulae, in which images of the object are recorded in the light of several spectral lines on a single plate, have long proven a useful diagnostic of nebular properties and morphology. Fortunately, the reasonably simple structure of most planetaries greatly aids interpretation of the images. The dust-enshrouded mass-losing asymptotic giant branch stars from which planetaries evolve have now also been imaged at millimeter wavelengths. These high-resolution images have demonstrated the role of photochemistry in molding the composition of circumstellar shells. This powerful techinique is less well-developed as a tool for analyzing the structure of localized density concentrations in molecular clouds, the cores in which stars form. Even pre-astral cores, in which stars have not yet formed, may have an extended and intricate geometry which renders mapping tedious and masks their true structure. Their basic pre-astral structure may be complexly contorted by the character and extent of star formation within them. How, then, does our perception of the structure of a core depend upon the line in whose light it is imaged? Which lines optimally determine physical structure? How should chemical differences, perceived by comparisons of images in different lines, be used to determine the physical characteristics of a core?