neuroanatomist said:Mt Spokane Photography said:So, I think you might be right, the average casual point and shoot person has been trained to expect everything to be in focus, and they are uncomfortable to the point of thinking something is defective with a shallow depth of field.
On the flipside of that, that's why many people used to the deep DoF of a P&S think shots from a dSLR and a wide aperture lens are 'professional'.
^this. Looking back at the history of photos since WWII, yes - you see a LOT of huge DOF photography. But those were also times where everyone on the planet didn't have a P-n-S camera in their pocket. People hire a photographer to capture an image in a way that they can't. (with the exception being photojournalism, where the qualities of a picture are less important than the content) These days, almost anyone can capture a shot with huge DOF. And until they figure out a way to get an f/1.4 lens with amazing IQ on an iPhone, I think that shallow DOF, buttery bokeh look is going to be what continues to give our services a perceived sense of value.
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