As a further pursuit, I have no experience with macros hand held, and even on a tripod, it was tough to keep it sharp.
Also want to ask about the actual shutter speeds and apertures that you used.
Regarding the Tone Targeted Sharpening, Terry's selection of settings are image dependent. That is, you see what Terry did and what Terry set, and you know to try various numbers.
So many times, we read questions that start out asking, "What numbers should I use when using Unsharp Mask and especially Tone Targeted Sharpening (TTS) ?
As you can see, situations plus your objective call for the trying various settings.
Clarifying Terry's choices, he chose the selection of Sharpen RGB. You can see from the screen snap that the EQ slider is all the way to the right.
That means that Terry found a shade or tone of color (oops! Colour) to select that he wanted softened.
As you check your work using the yellow button to see what was affected and what tones were not affected, you can move that slider to 95% and have another look, and 90%, and have another look.
What you are doing is telling Qimage Ultimate, look, I want to blur or soften that part of the birdbath, the part that contains *this* color. Now widen the shades of this color to include more.
In this case with Terry shooting Macro, the background will tend to go very soft anyway, so he didn't need to expand the color range of the RGB selection to blur more of the birdbath.
In most cases, you will usually need to select a 95% setting to achieve a noticeable blur.
But that's the beauty of the control you have with TTS. You can actually sharpen part of that wasp and blur another part.
Also you should note that minus settings in the strength box of TTS, should be not be too high. Inspect your work for a clean blur or softening.
Thanks for a great job Terry!!