Your comment about the "t/s look" indicates that you might not be aware of what a tilt shift lens is designed to do. Just in case you, or anyone else for that matter, isn't familiar with t/s lenses, I'll do a little explaining. It's common to see tilt/shift fake miniature pictures and that has perhaps clouded some people's impressions of tilt shift lenses.
First, tilting and shifting and different actions and serve different purposes. Tilting refers to adjusting the angle of the front part of lens. Shifting refers to moving the front part of the lens away from the center.
To understand the idea of tilting, think of a picture of a beautiful alpine meadow. You want the camera close to the ground and you want everything in sharp focus from the ground right in front of the camera to the distant mountain tops. With a normal lens, you have to make some awkward trade-offs. You can try increase the range of ground that is in focus by stopping down your aperture. Even at something like f/22, you won't everything in focus. On the other hand, you'll lose sharpness do to diffraction and you'll need a much longer shutter speed.
With a tilt shift lens, you can angle the lens. When you do that, you also change the angle of the plane of focus. You can angle it so that it roughly matches the slope of the ground up to the mountains. Now you can shoot at a more optically optimal aperture like f/5.6 and get the ground to the top of the mountains all in sharp focus.
You can also shift the lens to change perspective. In the classic example, consider a picture of a tall building. In order to fit it all in the frame, you need to tilt the camera upwards. When you do so, the sides of the building start to converge, giving the appearance that the building is tilting. With a tilt/shift lens, you don't need to tilt the camera. Instead, you keep it parallel with the building and just shift the lens upwards. That allows you change the angle of view without changing the perspective.
Those are the primary uses for T/S lenses. They are also popular for panoramic pictures (combining different shots with different shifts). Some people also like to tilt the plan of focus to minimize rather than maximize the area in focus. This can be done to make one element stand out. It can also be done for the cheesy fake miniature look.