I took my 4 shift lenses to the San Cataldo Cemetery in Modena to use the Ossario by Aldo Rossi as a test scene. I wanted to see the prospective effects as I switched lenses. Being a cube, it was almost perfect subject for my test. I stated with the 45mm TS and then attached the 35PC, 28PC and lastly the 24TS. I tried to fit the building equally into the pictures, but there is a certain approximation in my testing. I went back on a second occasion with the Laowa 15mm Zero Shift D to add this newly bought lens to the group. These pictures are not artistic.
My first reaction is that the 45TS "flattens" to much at some angles. The 35PC seems the most natural, the 28PC neither here nor there and the 24mm the most dramatic. The 24mm is good for modern building exteriors, but perhaps too dramatic for older monuments. The 15mm is just for fun here, but it has other uses.
The next test will be to find some old church with enough space to enable the use of the same four lenses for a similar test, but with the addition of diagonal shifts. Bell towers seem to be the critical part of the rendering of old churches, if you are not front on. But I want to codify the emotional perspective characteristics of each lens to make lens choice in the field easier.
The 15mm lens enabled an interesting view without using WA effects.
And the Inside front on shot was only possible with the 15mm
And the 45mm does not mean we always we lose nice perspective effects
As a final note. I mostly discarded fixed focal lengths, from the moment that bought the Nikon 35-70 2.8 back in the nineties. I still mostly use a zoom for hiking and travel. But for Architecture, I prefer fixed focal lengths as it is easier to select the right focal length for the subject, as the stepped perspective effects between lenses are easer to assess in the field. The perspective gaps between my lenses in 24-45 range are not huge as can be judged by looking at the building in the background.