I generally focus on writing the song first and getting a good vocal and very rough track down at the time and then work on the production after. I don’t want to write a song and stare at the screen rather than engage with the other writers.
I’ve recently been on a writing trip in Nashville, and although I have a LOT of mics in my collection, I only brought my Spirit and my 2 Starlights. That’s like an arsenal in itself. They are rugged, even my three year old girl can’t seem to destroy the starlight (though she’s tried!), reliable mics, and their performance amazing. With Starlights on acoustic in XY configuration, I get a simply amazing stereo acoustic guitar sound. One pointing to where the neck joins the body and the other to 2nd or third fret… not too close, then into an NEVE 1173.
I don’t really have to EQ… I can just change the character on the mic depending what mood I’m trying to create. They sound great on Piano too and the Laser sight helps when you want to get a good image. The Spirit is simply a great mic at any price. It sounds superb on most voices I’ve tried it on and is a great all-rounder instrument mic too.
And as for artists I’ve used the Astons with, well it’s almost everyone I’ve worked with… they really are easy to use, hard to fault, and almost impossible to get a bad sound out of.