is it the same with grain, pronounced grain, smooth grain, grain that has
part of the image itself ( maybe the photographic image is about grain ? ) ..
do you flaunt it to show your work is a photograph?
flotsam suggested that grain is supposed to be there.
should it be? if it wasn't would you make it appear if you could ?
if you shoot a smaller than 120film format, do you try to make grain,
or eradicate it completely by your developers/agitation techniques?
if you shoot larger than medium format, do you because you dislike grain ?
as for me, i don't mind grain, but sometimes i have to do what i am told
and do without.
what are your views ?
thanks
john
When I shoot 35mm, I find that the grain can "take over" an image...and if it's not the right image (something that looks good gritty and 'dirty') then you've lost some of the original artistic intent. I've tried shooting slow film (PanF+, Delta 100) and developing for very fine grain, but I've come the (perhaps mistaken?) conclusion that when I shoot 35mm I'm going to have obvious and occasionally obtrusive grain....grain that looks like the image is made out of the grain like a pointillism canvas.
on the other hand, I simply LOVE the grain I get with HP5+ on 120....most of my experience is with 645, and I just developed my first roll of 6x7 last night (came out perfect!!!

)....when I scan those in (sometimes I use my DSLR to digitize as well) I get a grain that almost always complements my original intent. It doesn't get in the way, but rather gives the illusion of even greater detail and sharpness!
One of the (lesser) reasons I went back to film was for the grain. Photoshop's "Add Noise" looks fake to my eyes, but for several years it was all I had. With the right image, and proper development and processing, film grain adds an undefinable, yet palpable, sense of reality and quality to a fine art image/print. When you consider street photography, grain is an integral part of the genre....if only because of its history and historic/iconic images!
-Jim