Originally Posted by
DanK
I agree with James about ACR/LR noise reduction. Since I upgraded to LR 4, I almost never use my dedicated noise reduction software. And I find the sharpening tool quite good and don't often need something else.
The point of this is that unless I misunderstand something, the distinction between capture and creative sharpening does not mean much (if anything) as long as you stay inside LR, which is a parametric editor. AFAIK, LR does not care what order you put your edits in, or how many times you add another edit of a given type, such as sharpening. AFAIK, when you export, it adds up the final recipe and applies it, in an order determined by the software rather than the order in which you made the edits. In this respect, it is completely unlike a layer-based pixel editor. So, I leave the LR sharpening at its default, because I can always undo it if I want. While I am in LR, I simply don't make the distinction between capture and creative sharpening because it has no functional value. When I get to that stage, I sharpen--once--until the image looks right on screen. The parameters for that sharpening depend on the image, of course. Later I apply output sharpening for whatever medium I am using.
I know this is out of sync with standard thinking about sharpening, but I have not yet found any convincing explanation of the value of separating the two stages within a parametric editor.
OOH, sometimes an image has some complexities in it, and I have to take it into PS. In that case, I typically leave LR sharpening at its default and then sharpen in PS.