Originally Posted by
DanK
Christina,
There is a lot of good detail in the answers so far, but I think we may have collectively missed an important point. In a few different ways, you asked:
You also used the word "standard."
With all due respect, I think you are asking the wrong question, and you are going to make things harder for yourself. All of the tools in LR are "normal", and there is no standard. Moreover, whatever Nikon engineers happened to use in their algorithms for picture styles are in no way a guide to what is reasonable for you to do.
What I suggest is that you stop worrying about what is in the Nikon engineers' algorithms and instead focus on (1) what you want to accomplish in your image, and (2) which tools (there are often quite a number to choose from) will get you what you want. So, for example, let's say you look at an image--an in-camera jpeg, someone else's image, or whatever--and you see that it has more contrast than the original rendering of your raw image. And, you decide you like the additional contrast. So, add contrast. Your task is then to learn which tools will do that and how they differ from each other. In Lightroom, there are at least 5 things you can do to increase the appearance of contrast: the contrast slider, changing blacks and whites, changing highlights and shadows, using the curves with control points, and increasing clarity. Take an image and play with all of these, perhaps checking out some tutorials along the way, to see for yourself what they do. It matters not at all which of them are closest to what the Nikon engineers did. That is just a distraction, IMHO.
Dan