In article <31212C6E.2DC0@ustboniface.mb.ca>, mamadou@ustboniface.mb.ca says...

>I took some indoor picture with a Kodak 3200 ASA
>and set my camera to 6400. Big time now !! Any suggestion
>of which developper to use for a finer grain ?
>Also, which developper to use to developp
>th Delta 100 ASA for a finer grain thanks for your help.

Fine grain starts with the choice of developer (I highly recommend
Kodak's D-76 as an excellent, normal-contrast, full-speed, sharp,
versatile [works well with virtually all films] developer [and it
may be diluted 1:1 for an economical always-fresh one-shot developer]);
choice of film; choice of optimum (unpushed) speed for that film-developer combination; and good technique (don't over-develop,
keep ALL fluid temperatures the same, minimize wet-time, and keep
the time in basic solutions short [I don't use hypo-clear, and I use only a 10 minute wash with vigorous agitation and frequent water changes, and keep the Photo-flo {mixed with distilled water, and more dilute than recomendated} time under 30 seconds]).
You have some hope of getting good negatives with the Delta 100
using my advice, but no hope with the TMZ, which is actually about
800 ASA true speed for good quality - much higher speed rating will
result in blobby grain and unsharp negatives of questionable tonal
quality.
Hope This Helps