Nininini said:f/16 is handy because you can focus a wide or standard focal length lens at about 3 metres in front of you and anything between 1 meter and 15 metres will be in focus for the rest of the day. I use hyperfocal when I want to photograph something in a relaxing manner and I just feel like taking some snapshots of stuff.
It only works well on bright enough days outside, where your shutter speed will be high enough to make it worth it.
But on bright days, sunny 16 rule and using hyperfocal focusing is incredibly fun, there is something satisfying about hitting the shutter and not having to wait for the camera to focus, yet having everything in a massive DoF in focus.
It's just fun, you can just point your camera at stuff without looking at the viewfinder or live view and get a sharp picture. Sure, the quality would have been better if you used f/8.0 or lower, avoiding diffraction and being able to lower ISO, but that's not the point. The point for me is about having fun, the pictures on bright days with f/16 are still great, and you no longer have to focus on anything, it's fun, try it.
Well, I think we have a very different understanding of "fun". Shooting pictures without thinking or even looking seems like a pretty boring way of killing time. And why would I need a DSLR for this kind of "fun"? Why not just use your phone? I don't really shoot pictures for the sake of shooting pictures.
Upvote
0