
Originally Posted by
Graeme Nattress
Sharpening isn't necessary, but can be applied if necessary. Practically all cameras sharpen as a matter of course, but being RAW-centric, we leave sharpening to the user as a choice. One of the sound reasons for that is that sharpening is best applied with the destination format in mind, so if you're wanting to go out to a cinema screen and a web video you could well want, for optimum results, different sharpening parameters for each.
What we all want to avoid is that "bad DVD release look" where you see layers of concatenated sharpening ringing all over the image drawing thick childs' crayon lines in black and white around objects in the scene.
Given many people take the 4k or 5k and downsample, it is often the case that the downsampling filter will be sufficiently sharp to render post-sharpening unnecessary. Personally, I'd only look at introducing sharpening if I'm going for creative effect or displaying the finished movie at 1:1 from it's source resolution.
Graeme