(Edited to include my answer to Koraks)
Thank you for your answers
I'm not sure I know what to answer, because :
1) I'm no expert in "development potency" after a certain amount of time.
2) I know that Rodinal is (by far) not the recommended developer for pushed 400 speed film, as I have stated from the start (with explanations as to why I'm attempting it anyway).
3) I don't know what "
best /
only option", "
decent image" , "
worst grain in history" or "
bad tone" mean... I thought that in photography, there were no absolute "do's and don'ts", that it was all, as you seem to acknowledge also, Juan Valdenebro, personal preference...
Each one of us can decide the limits we accept [...] I don't really like it [...] I prefer the tone of ISO3200 film[...] decent IMO [...] I like Rodinal's grain very much when it's small, sharp and tight.
4)
If the goal is scanning and creating digital files, it makes a lot more sense to capture digital images instead of using film.
There's nothing good in using film, only in using film perfectly for the tone it was designed for wet printing.
This is your opinion, which I respect. But considering that I also shoot color negative film quite a bit, that wet printing color film appears way too high a goal for me, and that labs digitize color film before printing it anyway, there is de facto a "digital" step for color. I have a B&W enlarger, and I do intent on printing B&W film someday, but I neither have the money nor the time nor a solid "plan" for installing a darkroom in my apartment at the moment. Again, I don't know what "using film perfectly" means, and I'm not sure I want to do that. And finally, there are tons of reasons why I prefer film over digital, even if the process includes scanning : I like the whole process (as mentioned in my introduction post), I like the constraints but also the freedom it brings, I like to experiment, I like the "look", I like the "tactility", etc...
@koraks : Yes, "Everything on HP5+ at 3200 is underexposed", as you stated. What he meant, I suppose, is that those 2 pictures were underexposed
even for HP5 at 3200. That's how I understand it anyway.
Sincerely,
Yael.