Originally Posted by
Colin Southern
There are techniques in Photoshop that make selective sharpening ridiculously easy. Probably the easiest is to just duplicate the layer - sharpen the top layer - and then just erase the portions you don't want sharpened. Should't take more than 30 seconds.
No - capture sharpening is usually applied to the whole image, but having said that, it only makes a difference for when you're working on the full resolution image at 100%; by the time you're displaying an image at 12.5 -> 25% you won't see it's effects, and if you down-sample the image for internet display then it's be sampled out anyway, so it's not a "biggie" if it's missed out altogether -- it just makes the image nicer to work on at high magnifications.
Normally no, but images that have areas of high-frequency detail and low-frequency detail may well require different sharpening treatment -- and bird photos are likely to fit that category. If you're talking bird and sky then my figures aren't going to have any noticeable effect on the sky anyway (unless there are clouds).
No - you wouldn't normally have to make output sharpening selective.
[I]
No - the conversion between file formats won't make any difference providing you're not trying to compress it excessively (setting 10 to 12 in Photoshop will be fine). The effectiveness of the sharpening is going to mostly depend on the ratio of the pixel dimensions to the printed size (generally, the higher the resolution and the smaller the size, the more any given sharpening gets "hidden") (often things that look over-sharpened on screen will print fine).