I believe my exact quote was "couldn't you just stand a couple feet further back to get more in the shot (in some cases)?" In some cases meaning not always... If it is a major problem, couldn't you use a wide angle lens (maybe not something as dramatic as a fish eye)with a crop sensor to get the same effect from a full frame?
No. In some situations, even the widest angle lens you can get isn't enough... sometimes even a fisheye isn't enough... you need absolutely as much width as you can possibly get... it is fundamentally impossible to get a full shot of a typical bathroom, for example. And this is even keeping in mind that there are lenses available for crop-sensors that are CRAZY wide. Like the Sigma 10-20mm that I use... even
that is not wide enough.
May I add btw...what would you need a camera for in a bathroom??? :scratch: In general, I would figure anything that happens in there is not something most would want to capture.
Well, in my case... real estate.
But also consider a skyline... there is a NOTABLE difference between 10mm and 14mm on a skyline shot... and again, you can't always just back up a few steps... one because a skyline is so far away that a few steps won't make much of a difference and two because a few steps could walk you into a building... or a swamp... or just put an obstruction in front of you that you don't want.
So my point here is that there are other cases, and probably plenty of them I just haven't thought of yet.
By the way, in some cases you can stitch shots together to solve this problem, but that's working around a limitation vs. just being able to line up and expose the image and move on to the next one.