Hi Tim,
So we're not confused; In Lightroom I think you're looking for Sharpening, it's under the Develop module / Detail panel / Sharpening
In previous versions of Lightroom, when sharpening you had to be zoomed into 100% to see the effects of the sharpening. If you're in the Lightroom 3 you can see your sharpening even at the lowest zoom level.
From the Adobe help file;
Amount - Adjusts edge definition. Increase the Amount value to increase sharpening. A value of zero (0) turns off sharpening. The adjustment locates pixels that differ from surrounding pixels based on the threshold you specify and increases the pixels’ contrast by the amount you specify.
Radius - Adjusts the size of the details that sharpening is applied to. Photos with very fine details may need a lower radius setting. Photos with larger details may be able to use a larger radius. Using too large a radius generally results in unnatural-looking results.
Detail - Adjusts how much high-frequency information is sharpened in the image and how much the sharpening process emphasizes edges. Lower settings primarily sharpen edges to remove blurring. Higher values are useful for making the textures in the image more pronounced.
Masking - Controls an edge mask. With a setting of zero (0), everything in the image receives the same amount of sharpening. With a setting of 100, sharpening is mostly restricted to those areas near the strongest edges.
Holding down the Alt key can be very helpful as Paul describes.
The Clarity tool is sort of like using the Unsharp Mask in Photoshop, but without the extra sharpness. Clarity affects the contrast only in the midtone range.
I'm trying to figure out if there are two places on the planet further apart in culture, environment, and general vib than KBR and Helmand. I think you have the record Tim.
Stay cool,
Steve
Edited by Steve Williams, 27 October 2010 - 05:58 AM.