I've taken lemons and want to make lemonade. I had 7 Canon speedlites and a transmitter that were sitting around collecting dust and decided to sell them to add a big flash and another lens. Sold my Tamron 15-30 also.
The new flash was easy to pick, but the lens is more difficult.
My choices are the new Canon 85mm f/1.4L IS or one of the tilt / shift models. My main focus is portraits. The creative possibilities with tilt / shift are very intriguing.
If I take the tilt shift route I'm wondering if the 90mm for portraits is the way to go, or to go wider. I really wish I could get a trio, but... $$$$$ just ain't there.
On the other hand, maybe the 50mm would be better?
I'm hoping somebody here uses one of these tilt / shift lenses a lot for portraits and can give some examples of what they've accomplished with them.
I know the lenses are manual focus and that they are much slower. However, when it comes to aperture it appears that this isn't too much of a concern when it comes to dof because of the way focus can be manipulated.
I'm not going to rent a lens.
Thanks guys.
The new flash was easy to pick, but the lens is more difficult.
My choices are the new Canon 85mm f/1.4L IS or one of the tilt / shift models. My main focus is portraits. The creative possibilities with tilt / shift are very intriguing.
If I take the tilt shift route I'm wondering if the 90mm for portraits is the way to go, or to go wider. I really wish I could get a trio, but... $$$$$ just ain't there.

I'm hoping somebody here uses one of these tilt / shift lenses a lot for portraits and can give some examples of what they've accomplished with them.
I know the lenses are manual focus and that they are much slower. However, when it comes to aperture it appears that this isn't too much of a concern when it comes to dof because of the way focus can be manipulated.
I'm not going to rent a lens.
Thanks guys.