Mike is referring to a sequence of sharpening that is sometimes called three-stage sharpening which is popularly associated with the late Bruce Fraser (
http://www.creativepro.com/article/out-of-gamut-thoughts-on-a-sharpening-workflow). I process my NEF files in Lightroom and apply capture sharpening there (what Mike refers to as restoring the image sharpness at 100% view). I find that its sharpening algorithm is quite good for this. I usually use 80 .7 40 40 as a starting point. I also have some presets from different sources. I save final files as TIFs in a separate folder titled "Final Prints" and make the prints through Qimage with Smart Sharpening at its default setting. I also use Qimage to prepare files for printing at Costco using profiles from Dry Creek Photo (
http://www.drycreekphoto.com/icc/). The results are always outstanding.
You can also try the USM feature in Qimage with the print equalizer for capture sharpening, although I find the results less satisfactory than Lightroom.
- Chris