subtle_spectre wrote:
So far, it is clear that the respondents are all over the board with the settings. What about the Canon prescription...what is it....300/.3/0? In the end, imo it is a mtter of image contingency. A portrait will require different settings than, say, a landscape. I will be interested to see more suggestions.
300/.3/0 is recommended for 1-series cameras with in-camera and RAW sharpening set to 0. The 1-series at "0" appears to have no sharpening at all, and thus is a candidate for the greatest amount of PP adjustment. By keeping sharpening low at the start, greater flexibility is given to post-processing. For example, sharpening accentuates image noise, so it is a good idea to control for noise before adding sharpening to an image.
If the in-camera sharpening is set above zero (as it is by default in the 20D, 10D, XT, and in some picture styles on the 5D and 1D IIn), less PP sharpening is necessary, but perhaps at the expense of flexibility later.
I shoot RAW so I have the ability to adjust sharpening in DPP before I convert to JPG. That allows me to make the decision as to whether to keep what the camera gives me or alter it while still in RAW. I generally like how the 5D does sharpening, so unless I've got a noisy image, I keep a modest amount of the in-camera sharpening on my images.