Before I try to answer some of the questions posed, I wanted to say that I appreciate all the nice words about my work posted and sent to me via PM or emails.
I never intended to start a film vs digital debate as I think there is no point to it. I love film and still shoot some B&W for my personal work, but have opted to use digital for 90% of my professional work. I travel a lot (in the next two months I will be covering weddings all over from Finland to Chicago to Mexico...) and if I were not using digital and the ability it gives me to get a lot done while on an 8-10 hour flight, I would be buried with catching up and taking away from the time that I like to spend with my family.
The reason of my post was to hopefully encourage other professionals to not be afraid of the M8 as it is a very good camera with awesome image quality. Like someone already mentioned, rangefinders, SLRs, Holgas are just tools and not a religion.
My workflow starts at capture time and ensuring my exposures are as accurate as possible is key. As far as post-processing, I use very few actions (mostly my own dodging, burning, vignetting and the aging action. This is just a layer applied to the image in soft screen mode of textures that I have photographed). I run my actions with a programmed X-Keys tablet that saves a lot of time. And finally I don't post process all my images, only what I put on my blog, whatever gets ordered for custom printing and the final images that go in the album.
I love the Canon 45 TSE (tilt-shift) lens and all the soft focus images are made with this lens. There is something in the TS lenses that IMHO can not be achieved with Photoshop or lens babies, but YMMV... I've seen some TS images from Canon lenses shot with the M8 so I assume there is some sort of adaptor available (I will definitely research this as I can't part with my tilt and shift lens... if anyone know any solution, please let me know...)
Cheers,
Riccis