A lot of good replies, but pierods please: Tell us more about what you are trying to do. My advices was about dealing with sunny or dull weather. Others guess that you are looking for "soot n' chalk". Some people refer to (Ok, barks about...) the zone system.
As you didn't mention much at all, the answers are all over the place.
//Björn
One of the problems is that HP5+ is not a high contrast film by its nature. The peak contrast index in Rodinal, for instance, is only about 0.61 at the 1+50 dilution, and not much higher with 1+25. If you try by overdevelopment to get more, you will increase fog. There are other developers that will get more contrast, inckuding XTOL, but not much above 1.0 IIRC.
A question, its Kodak equivalent, Tri-x, has more contrast?
"Trying to get more by development will start raising the shadow values and possible film base fog."
I have tested, and shot, for +2 on this film, and it gets there with no problems...takes a while but it gets there! Tone it afterward and it can make it to approx. +3, where a zone V fall ends up a zone VIII density. Of course shadow values and fog increase. So what. The highlights are also raising, and at a faster rate, so there in no loss of contrast when this happens. It starts building more slowly, but it does not get lost. If you need to develop so far that you are notably increasing fog, you have other concerns beside fog, which can just be burned away in printing.
Can you tell us how you're metering and what "ISO" you're using?
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