lancekingphoto
I went on a photo walk this afternoon with my trusty, old Konica TC-X SLR, and shot a fresh (unexpired) roll of Arista.edu Ultra 100. The meter seemed to be working fine but nearly all my shots were overexposed, regardless of the subject or lighting. So I'm guessing my meter is off. More disconcerting is the fact that the majority of images also have an excessively grainy appearance. I'm attaching an example of an image that I adjusted for exposure in GIMP. This is typical of the kind of graininess I'm talking about.
So any ideas what went wrong? A few possibilities enter my mind:
(1) The overexposure created the grainy effect.
(2) The age of my developer. I'm using D-76 that was mixed several months ago, but it hasn't yellowed noticeably, as I've seen with really old developer.
(3) I got a bad roll of film.
Or could it be something else I'm missing? I've used this film with excellent results in the past.
So any ideas what went wrong? A few possibilities enter my mind:
(1) The overexposure created the grainy effect.
(2) The age of my developer. I'm using D-76 that was mixed several months ago, but it hasn't yellowed noticeably, as I've seen with really old developer.
(3) I got a bad roll of film.
Or could it be something else I'm missing? I've used this film with excellent results in the past.

What I did sense was a serious attempt to help you determine what caused your problem. Looking at the photo you offered, I could definitely see a "been there, done that" problem which I have also encountered. I tried using Photoshop to correct the underexposure and really kicked up the grain. I was using Fomapan 100. It is a somewhat crappy film with a horrid curling problem (I'm using Fomapan 120), developed in HC-110 dilution B. To be honest, I thought the photo was pretty cool, the grain gave it some character. 
