Collection-based source list entries

To reduce the size of the source list for imaged church books, I am using a source list entry that reflects the containing collection, rather than the church/organization. Usually, the collection name does not reflect the church name. So, there is no implicit relationship between the first reference note and the relevant source list entry.

So; I have a question about how to address this...

In the example below; should one insert, "Canada, Ontario Roman Catholic Church Records, 1760-1923", just prior to, FamilySearch? Doing so seems to make sense. It ensures that the relevant collection is evident in the first reference note and also establishes a "linkage" between the first reference note and the relevant source list entry.

--- current citation ---

Source List Entry: Canada. "Canada, Ontario Roman Catholic Church Records, 1760-1923". Database with images. FamilySearch. https://www.familysearch.org/search/collection/1927566 : 2022.

First Reference Note: St John the Evangelist (Osgoode, Carleton County, Ontario, Canada), Baptisms, marriages, burials 1860-1917, n.p., 1903, entry M–3, Ambrose Brophy and Annie Louise Daley (married 9 June 1903); imaged, "Canada, Ontario Roman Catholic Church Records, 1760-1923", FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GYWQ-7HZ : downloaded 4 June 2022); citing Catholic Church parishes, Ontario.

Subsequent Note: St John the Evangelist (Osgoode, Carleton Co., ON, CAN), Baptisms, marriages, burials 1860-1917, n.p., 1903, entry M–3, Ambrose Brophy and Annie Louise Daley (married 9 June 1903).

Submitted byEEon Wed, 10/26/2022 - 16:29

History-Hunter, your approach seems to work well. EE would omit the "citing" layer in the First Reference Note because it adds nothing more than what your Layer 1 reports.

H-H, EE would not consider that an error. Whether images are "browsable" or not, they are presented within a "database with images."  The opposite term for "browsable images" would be "indexed images," but for a citation to specify whether a database is indexed or browsable would be comparable to stating whether a book had an index or must be searched page by page, no?