Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/10/24
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Pixoptik@aol.com wrote: (snip) > The crux of the matter (which is obvious to even a newbie like me) > is that this is the "Leica Users Group" and some of us are extremely > biased to just that & have no tolerance for the collector or > especially > the collector of "Specials", which certainly won't be used. Well I can't speak for anyone else, but I love collectibles, and hate the "special" M6's or R's. It's not that I hate collectibles, it's that I hate pseudo collectibles that take advantage of the naive. Leica started first and foremost as a camera maker. Leicas later became collectible by accident, not by design-----because their quality of construction, workmanship, and optics were universally appreciated. Through screw mount and M production, they remained the best of the best of their type with the combination of technological leadership with quality. Even the most common Leica, the M3, will fetch very handsome prices if in truly like new condition. Once Leica's fortune's began a downturn thanks to the market success of Japanese SLRs, it was all Leica could do to simply survive. They began to trade on their reputation by making a series of instant collectibles for the gullible. While it might make sense to make a 50th or 75th commemorative camera, why a "Danish Royal Wedding" and the like for any reason except to fleece the naive from their wallets? How long will it be until the marketing geniuses at Solms proudly release the "Not So Royal Wedding" M6 or the "I Got Fleeced at Solms" R8? It would be a far better situation if Leica returned to their old standards by making common cameras worth collecting because of their quality, rather than the "special edition" cameras claimed to be collectible due to their rarity. Rarity alone does not make a Leica valuable or desirable, as the deluge of special editions is proving. Regards, Stephen Gandy