Do you ever post a question thinking that there's probably an blindingly obvious answer that you've overlooked and everyone else will shout "Duh!". Well this is one of those.
I've noticed when shooting in low light situations that the 'apparent' size of grain can vary on a single film. I recently went to a friend's wedding where the official photographer was apparently a bit spooked by the fact that my friend was the curator of a photography gallery and so specified a point-and-shoot camera only policy! Which I can understand to some extent but you do wonder who was the customer in that situation.
Anyway, so there I was with my little Olympus p&s loaded with some Neopan 1600. This is processed in Rodinal which I understand is not recommended for high speed film, but I would have expected the film to be equally grainy all the way through. I don't know how clear it'll be from the 100% sections below but some shots are significantly grainier than others.
The first shot had a window at high level giving some back lighting so the faces were a little underexposed. The second is at 90 deg to the light so probably more accurately metered. This is the only difference I can think but would that make such a difference.
I'll post the original untouched negs below.
I'd really appreciate your thoughts.