I've done both but none of them gave me this coarse and huge grain. Delta 400's grain is coarse also compared to HP5 which is rather soft. I liked both but I needed something noisy.Why not just use delta 400 or HP5? If you commit to 400 iso you may as well use a film suited to that. Lots of good 400 iso film around.
So I've done my test.
The contrast is super low as I thought but this kind of creamy/silky tone I really like and also the coarse grain.
I've shot it at 400 and developed it in Rodinal 1+25 for 5 and a half minute. I was thinking to give it a bit more time but then I changed my mind and sticked to the datasheet so I can build from there. I might shoot the next roll as 400 and develop it as 800 just to boost it. I'm also playing with the idea to shoot it as 800 and develop it as 800 or 1600.
I'll also re-edit the photos I just gave them a go to see the outcome and I'm not a photo edit wizard anyway.
Thanks, I really like it too!what a beautiful grain...
1) I got the same coarse grain though less when used Delta 400 in Rodinal 1+25. Shot and developed as 400.I have two question regarding grain signature and Rodinal concentration on grain.
1) Are there any films that have similar grain signature as above, with that concentration?
2) Do changing concentration of Rodinal have any influence on the grain?
I am surprised that you found this. My experience was that D400 grain was finer than HP5 which is also what Ilford itself seems to believe. Delta 400's grain is coarse also compared to HP5 which is rather soft.
Yes, these are scans. Nikon D3200 with Nikkor 55mm, f3.5.It would be nice to see some of the op's shots that were made in strong daylight (because I like more contrast), but the results show promise. Would also love to see this film/developer combination using a half frame camera. So far, I'm happy shooting Tri-X at 200 and developing in Rodinal at 1:25. The grain is different from these shots and not so closely packed together.
I'm assuming these are scans? Things will look a lot different in a darkroom print. In the early days I scanned my negs and did the inkjet thing, and believe me, going to a darkroom made a big difference in the grain. Things were smoother.
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