Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2001/04/10
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Steve, If you want a digital camera now, go and buy a D30 and a Canon zoom like maybe a 17-35. That will equal about a 24-50 on a film camera and you can make pictures. Adding a Leica lens is not going to help. Its just going to slow you down. With a Canon lens on your Canon camera you get all the features you paid for. Just know that in a year or two you'll probably want to sell the D30 to someone and buy the next newest thing out. (same for any digi cam you buy today) Or if that sounds too complicated/expensive buy a 990 Nikon. You would be amazed at the pictures you can make with this fairly inexpensive camera. I've published pictures from this camera and done a bunch of commercial work with it. Literally hundreds of portraits and product shots. It has amazing image quality. You do have to work around the point and shoot features but you CAN do it. As for the idea of Leica glass on Canon bodies check the archives. There is a ton of info about this and even a Nikon body that was modified to take a Leica lens. http://mejac.palo-alto.ca.us/leica-users/ Henry >Doug...have you ever used your Leica R lenses on a digital body....Canon or >Nikon....too many compromises or incompatablities...is it just a stupid >idea? I assume what you said below applies only to M lenses... > >----- Steve >> >> For normal focussing distances this is a fantasy, because the >flange-to-film plane distance on a rangefinder is shorter than on any >35mm-based reflex camera, at least the ones I know of. For close-ups with >typical M lenses, or viso lenses at normal distances, you can use one of the >adapters like those sold by Stephen Gandy to put the lens on a D30 or D1, or >you can use a viso-to-R adapter and then get a Novoflex R-to-EOS adapter. >> >> Doug Herr >> Birdman of Sacramento >> http://www.wildlightphoto.com >> > >