Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/08/26
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I really enjoyed the posting by "Mark E Davison" <Mark_E_Davison@email.msn.com> on cameras as instruments. >Unfortunately, our harried modern lifestyles, filled with work, often leave us with money to buy fine instruments, but not the time to master them. We end up with the instruments, but not enough time to develop our talents. This is a paradox of modern capitalism which is worth pondering. I wonder how many fine cameras are bought with the intention to make fine images, but end up filling up closet shelves. Or how many fine pianos grace rooms as beautiful furniture, but sit silent. Last weekend I was passing through Cambridge, and decided to take along a IIIg I've just bought. I wanted to check that it was working OK, and to see what effect the scratches on the lens front element would have on picture quality. A IIIg was my camera in the 1960s and early 1970s, and travelled with me on many holidays to Rome, Greece, and Egypt. My first attempts to use my "new" IIIg were very clumsy, but after a few frames and a pint of Greene King Abbot ale my left hand remembered its cunning, and I was using that IIIg as if the last two decades had never been. It felt more familiar than the cameras I've used since selling the IIIg. I guess that's nature's way of telling me I don't use my Ms and 'flexes enough. Regards, Doug Richardson