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Max Sharpness with Hyperfocal Distance

In landscape photography, you want everything from the flowers in the front to the mountains in the back to be sharp. Focusing on infinity often blurs the foreground. The **Hyperfocal Distance** tool at **Online Tool Base** calculates the exact distance you should focus on to maximize your Depth of Field.

Technically, the Hyperfocal Distance is the closest point you can focus on while keeping infinity reasonably sharp. **onlinetoolbase.online** helps you find this specific meter/foot mark on your lens, ensuring deep focus without stopping down to f/22 (and suffering from diffraction).

Why Use This Tool?

Guessing focus leads to soft images. By focusing at the Hyperfocal Distance (e.g., 2.5 meters), your zone of sharpness extends from half that distance (1.25m) all the way to the horizon. It is the secret to professional landscape rigidity.

Key Features

  • CoC Calculation: Uses Circle of Confusion based on sensor size.
  • Unit Toggle: Meters or Feet.
  • Aperture Range: Supports f/1.4 to f/32.

How to Use

  1. Select your Camera + Lens Focal Length.
  2. Choose your Aperture (f/8 or f/11 is common).
  3. Read the Hyperfocal Distance (e.g., 4 ft).
  4. Manually focus your lens to 4 ft.

Technical & Privacy Note

Optics math. The **Hyperfocal Distance** tool from **Online Tool Base** runs locally using standard optical formulas.