My advice would be to keep it simple to start with.
Keep the camera level, that would be number one, adopt a height roughly half that of the room so you can move the tripod mounted camera around and get loads of angles quickly, this very much also applies to the exteriors but with your shift lens that's easy.
You may want to start with two flashes pointing out at about 45 degrees from the camera if there is insufficient light, unless you want to try placing the lights remotely, but this takes much longer for every shot.
If you have strong contrast between inside and outside then bracket, a lot and combine in post processing, shoot RAW
If you have access to a laptop then do a few shots, download and test, then repeat, this will give you an idea of how your shots look and provide a backup.
Lastly, little things matter. Try not to have chairs visually touching windows & doors, avoid anything that might be distracting. The 'propping' of the photo is just as important as the camera angles.
Jun 10, 2020 at 03:13 PM
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