I can understand about the "soft" comments. I shoot mostly in RAW (99%), and don't have PS 6 or 7 not willing to shell out so much money for these programs, so can't use Nik sharpening pro or other sharpening plug-ins.
Having PS 5 LE (Elements 1. also, but with no curves-barely use it), I resort to simple sharpening-don't use high pass filter, (it has that but ?? what is it??) different color channels or other complicated techniques.
My way is pretty simple-if the photo has plenty detail, I use a smaller pixel (radius), say between .3-.7 or.8, but a higher percentage-say 85-105-175-whatever looks best. I think the smaller radius keeps the edge sharpening very small-but effective, and use either 0 or 1 threshold.
I usually view at 100% when doing any sharpening and look for any "halo" in contrasty areas. I also find a print is usually more sharp than what my monitor shows-so if it looks super sharp on the screen, it probably is 'too sharp', looking 'over processed' for a print.
This really is different if you have done film scanning, so I have different expectations-and not having full versions of Photo Shop (but PS5LE is pretty powerful), I just try to get the most from what I have.
If the shot has larger masses of color, I experiment with a larger radius-say .8-1.5 or larger, but a lower percentage of sharpening-maybe 45%, 85%, whatever looks okay but not too overdone.
I also try to use a tripod (since it's new, more-so), and use the smallest aperture. I am experimenting with ISO 100 also-checking noise. It seems if the photo has a bit more contrast, it would appear more sharp.
I do use Breezebrowser and Downloader, so I do use the smart noise reduction feature (low or normal) when I convert my RAW files. I keep the EXIF info in the RAW file, if I want to reconvert a shot. I do believe any noise filter (Canon's processing or Breezebrowser's) could have something to do with softening-maybe not. It reminds me of gaussian blur, like to remove noise in skies.
Just my 2 cents.
Kerry
Bill-nice shots at Photosig-beautiful scenery.