it's to simplify the shooting of panoramic images
But you can also just take a single frame of autofocus 30mm instead of two frames of manually-focused shifted 50mm and skip the entire stitch step. Or a frame of 14mm instead of two 24mm, etc. Or just swivel any lens on the camera and stitch those.
Buying a special tilt-shift lens is never going to be the "simple" way of doing anything.
I get that you like doing it and do it a fair amount. I've done it too, even back in the 90s when PhotoCD was the main way to get a scan of film, and I had to stitch manually in Photoshop 5.0. I get that it's fun. But it's not simple.
> Some people still require fairly large images, and can't crop too much.
Hard to image many sales or prints or what have you just absolutely cannot tolerate a mere 22MP and yet, are fine with the lower IQ such an image will have outside of 22mm radius. I don't recall ever seeing MTF charts for shift lenses that show how they perform out of the normal 22mm radius circle, nor a description of the vignetting.
> Sometimes you can't back-off enough.
You can't back off enough to use a trinity zoom at 0.6x the focal length of your shift lens? You shouldn't have to back off even a millimeter. Whoever told you the alternative is backing off is pulling your leg.
> And these images are easier to stitch
Not easier than a single image that doesn't need a stitch, no.
> Tilt allows to rotate the focus plane, but it's not magical - depends where those points are
Sigh, I never said it WAS magical. OF COURSE it depends on where the points are, but there are a huge number of compositions that should be within reach.
> What is niche for you is routine for others.
I'm going to call bullshit on that, or at least your strong implication that they BENEFIT by working like that. Show me a guy whose ROUTINE output is stitching shift images together and I'll show you a guy who doesn't realize he could get the exact same shot by cropping a normal shot from the same position with 0.6x or so of the focal length.
And more importantly, you aren't qualifying how many such shooters there are vs. my counterexample of how many photos need 2 or 3 points in focus.