I'll reply to both of you (Mark and Andrew) at the same time as you are essentially making the same point, I think: you both want a consistent workflow that covers all of the different media and technologies you use, and you're happy with your current workflow, and believe that it is the best workflow for sharpening and resizing.
Well of course I have no issue with that at all. And I’m sure I would be very resistant to someone telling me that I should change my workflow … without demonstrating that what I was doing was sub-optimal, at any rate.
So, to be clear, I’m not at all suggesting that anyone should change their workflow to cut out capture sharpening.
My post was more like “Hey, what do you think, could it be that we can sharpen just the once? Could there be some benefit to sharpening as little and as few times as possible?”
The thing is … that leaving out a step in a workflow doesn’t mean that you have abandoned or changed your workflow. You could think of it like this: “I’m going to stick with my workflow and apply capture sharpening as I always do, but for this image I’m going to set the sharpening strength to 0).
As you are both, no doubt, working on many images a week, perhaps you could try it on one and see how you get on.
Robert