Following on from Brian's posting on Stone Sculpture stacking [URL="https://www.cambridgeincolour.com/forums/thread60262.htm[/URL] I read around on the topic of focus stacking for landscapes. Although a few use the simple approach I mention below, many give what I see as unnecessarily complicated procedures. Most are agreed that, for landscapes, you only need a few images in the stack - three to five at the most. Many authors the spend time looking up hyperfocal distances to get the spacing. Others recommend looking at each image as you take it, then focussing on a spot just out of focus. Meanwhile, the light changes, or a tourist walks into your scene.
Why not take the simple approach: take one shot of the nearest point of interest. Then look at your focussing barrel and roughly divide the distance (on the barrel) between there and infinity by four; then take three more shots at this spacing and one at infinity. Assuming you have a reasonable aperture, this should give you a suitable stack in a lot less time.
Comments welcome.
John