The grain (black dots) that you see in a print comes from where the light passes through the gaps between the silver grains on the negative. Therefore, a denser negative will not necessarily create more grain in the print. This old chestnut crops up so often! Just think about the logic. The highlights on your negatives may have received more than 8 stops more exposure than the shadows. Are the highlights then 8 times more grainier than your shadows?
As to the reference to Ralph Gibson, he stated that he exposed Tri-X at 'nominally' ISO 200 (no great over-exposure there) but then also said he always exposed at f16 on bright sunny days. The key to the level of grain in his images can be found in the book "Darkroom" by Lustrum Press. He stated that he developed Tri-X in Rodinal 1:25 at 68F for 11 minutes, with ten seconds agitation every 90 seconds by rolling the tank on its side. This is approximately 50% over-development which he then went on to print on very high contrast papers.
To sum up, the biggest contributors to grain are:
- Type of film (older tech films such as Foma are more grainy than newer tech films such as the current Tri-X which has more grain than T-Max)
- Speed of film (accepting point one, a faster film will have more grain)
- Choice of developer
- Development time / frequency of agitation
In normal use, some additional exposure will not make any significant contribution to the appearance of grain. Insufficient exposure may have an effect because under-exposed negatives (as opposed to 'pushed') tend to need to be printed at higher grades.
The easiest way to achieve tons of grain with any film (relative to its inherent qualities when exposed and processed normally) is to over-develop it by at least 50%.
Bests,
David.
www.dsallen.de