tonylong wrote in post #12919658
Basically, besides following the tips from myself and others here, the most useful things for you could be 1) Do Google searches and take your time to follow through, trying phrases like "lightroom sharpening tutorial" or simply "lightroom sharpening" will give you a wealth of info.
The problem with this is that there's potentially a very significant difference between sharpening in a way that makes the print look the best, and sharpening based on the steps that I read on some tutorial that came up on Google.
If I find ten different sharpening methods with my Google search, how do I know if any of them are better than the method that I'm currently using? Having only been at this a little more than a year, my eye isn't quite trained well enough yet to distinguish from "properly sharpened" and "incorrectly sharpened." I might sharpen in a way that looks pretty good to me on my screen, but a trained eye would be able to pick out flaws - haloing, artifacts, etc.
I prefer a tutorial that tells me not only what to do, but also what NOT to do, and more importantly WHY to do or not do each step. If the tutorial simply gives me the steps without any further explanation, then I'm not really learning everything I need to know.
Hopefully the Pixelgenius PDF will give me what I'm craving. Sharpening and NR are still two important aspects of post-processing that I know I'm not doing as well I as could.
[edit] I've done the Lynda LR3 essentials, which briefly covers sharpening; and the Adobe TV LR3 videos which pretty much just say "Here are the sliders, look what they can do," but my understanding is still somewhat lacking.