Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2001/09/08
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]and in the new MOMA design catalog you can buy a handblown and painted in Germany Leica M6 ornament...it even has a see through lens. But, hey, you know it's not the real thing because it will only set you back $16...... trish ternahan@gentlelens.net > From: "Dave Myers" <myers@beautifulmichigan.com> > Reply-To: leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us > Date: Sat, 8 Sep 2001 21:51:10 -0400 > To: <leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us> > Subject: [Leica] Outside Magazine's "The Best" list > > Just got the October issue of Outside magazine in which there is an article > entitled "The Best 120 Cool Things." On the list are such things as a > $5,600 Steven Cycles Odonata road bike, the Apple Powerbook G4 Titanium > Edition computer, the $2,500 TAG Heuer Kirium TiS watch, and the $430,000 > Aerodyne 47 sailing vessel. There are two cameras on the list the Nikon > FM3A and our beloved Leica M6. Nice big picture of the M6 (no picture of > the Nikon). They describe the M6 as follows: > > "Over decades, Leica has emerged as the maker of the sturdiest, most > reliable small cameras on earth. While, ahem, not exactly cheap, the M6 TTL > shown here, has a bombproof body capable of enduring extremes in temperature > and vibration -- a masterwork of fussy German engineering. As a range > finder camera, the M6 lacks the hinged mirror and spring-loaded iris of an > SLR, so the shutter release is both whisper-quiet and extremely fast. > Loading the film is tricky, but with exquisite optics and incomparable > durability, you'll have a lifetime to practice." > > It doesn't get much better than that for the folks in Solms. > > Dave >