[Leica] Farewell, My Lovelies
Tina Manley
images at comporium.net
Tue Feb 9 15:30:20 PST 2016
Well, I have tried to get rid of my M6's but it seems my reputation has
preceded me and nobody wants them! That's fine. I'll keep them on the
shelf and remember them every time I scan the film that ran through them.
I've always regretted every Leica I've ever sold so I'll just keep these
for my grandkids. Someday they will be valuable antiques!!
Great story, Bill!!
Tina
On Tue, Feb 9, 2016 at 6:24 PM, Jay Burleson <leica at jayburleson.com> wrote:
> Bill, I feel your pain.
> I too carefully built up a small Leica film system years ago, and it was
> was heart-wrenching to see it sitting on the shelf.
> So it all went off to a goo home several years ago.
> More recently I was in a lucky position that I could start fresh with all
> new digital bodies and a set of lenses... and after a a couple of years
> with that I decided I had to have an M4. Just because it is so lovely.
>
> Thanks for the story, and good luck and keep posting with whatever has a
> shutter button!
>
> Jay
>
> On 2/8/2016 9:15 PM, W.C. Clough wrote:
>
>> USA
>> TEXAS
>> VICTORIA
>> 08 February 2016
>>
>> I have cleaned the bodies, the black M6 and the chrome,
>> double-stroke M3, cycled their shutters at 1/1000 a number of times to keep
>> them in shape and then carefully wrapped them in protective bubble wrap for
>> their journey.
>>
>> As best I could, I cleaned their lenses — the 35mm Summicron, the
>> 90mm Elmar, the Skopar 21mm — each with their incredible stories. Soon,
>> equally protected, they joined the bodies, all cushioned and sealed inside
>> the double-cardboard box for their trip to a new existence.
>>
>> Someone once said that all farewells should be brief. That
>> philosophy is the great tradition of Episcopal funeral services, a quick
>> service to spare the grief of those left behind.
>>
>> In this case, the rapidity was to prevent second thoughts. The
>> cameras had been on there shelf for so long it was a surprise to find an
>> exposed roll of Kodak BW400 still in the M6. What frames are latent are as
>> much a mystery as where, in today’s digital world, to have the film
>> developed.
>>
>> “Of course we still develop film,” says the manager at the local
>> Walgreen’s Drug Store. “But we put the images on a CD. You don’t get the
>> negatives back.”
>>
>> The company buying the equipment will never know the chain of
>> events that they represent.
>>
>> At the turn of the century I ran a computer search for “Leica
>> Users Group.” To my astonishment and pleasure there was one. It had a
>> strange program called “PAW.”
>>
>> At that time, the only bodies I owned was an antique — and still
>> working — Leica ii, and a double-stroke M3. The only lens was the first
>> lens I ever bought, a 1960 50mm Nikkor f1.4.
>>
>> A few, senior, LUG members may remember the story of that lens.
>> After a few days of shooting, the aperture was getting stiff. I found leafs
>> of the iris floating freely inside. I wrote a long, nostalgic obit for the
>> lens on the LUG which prompted a score of messages all with “Focal Point”
>> in the subject line.
>>
>> Focal Point was a company in Colorado specializing in repairing
>> old lenses. A telephone call indicated the problem was common and familiar;
>> the cost would be about $125.
>>
>> I was the news director of the public radio station in Corpus
>> Christi. It was the smallest market public radio station in the country. It
>> ran pledge drives for light bulbs. I was pretty sure I could afford to fix
>> the lens, barely.
>>
>> Then came the invoice for $250. Another obit on the LUG,
>> explaining I couldn’t afford the repair.
>>
>> In less than a week, the lens arrived, paid in full. I still
>> don’t know who to thank. No greater example exists of the LUG being a
>> family.
>>
>> I have kept the Nikkor. It has earned a special place on the
>> collector shelf.
>>
>> The next link in the chain was an email from LUG member no longer
>> active. “What is your mailing address?” he messaged. I sent it. In a few
>> days a 90mm f4 Elmar arrived. He had found it on a shelf, unused, and
>> thought I might make use of it.
>>
>> A few weeks later, there was a message on my desk that read
>> “Leica,” with a phone number. It was from a photojournalist who was
>> spending his retirement driving around the country in an RV. When he drove
>> into a town, he checked out the camera stores, and then, at the next town,
>> passed on what Leica bargains he had found in the previous town.
>>
>> He told me that in El Paso, he had found a 35mm f2.8. “There’s
>> only one camera store there and they want to get rid of it,” he said.
>>
>> He was wrong. There were six cameras stores in El Paso.
>> Naturally, the correct one was the last I called. And, it wasn’t a f2.8, it
>> was an f2.
>>
>> The company emailed me photographs of the lens. This is an
>> important point, because if it knew how to attach photos to an email, then
>> access to the internet was a given.
>>
>> The asking price was $250. At that time, the average used price
>> for a 35mm Summicron was $650.
>>
>> One of the best photographers I know is a colleague, Tyler Vance.
>> He sold me a M6 at half the market price. In short order, I had a Leica
>> system.
>>
>> In the ensuing years, I have hoped that the images I posted to
>> the LUG and to the annual yearbook partially paid for these incredible
>> breaks.
>>
>> Age demands its dues. Over those same years, digital cameras have
>> come into their own. I am just as slaved to the ability to preview as I am
>> to auto focus. So, the Leicas lived in limbo, locked in the camera closet.
>>
>> I still have the old Kinderman tanks: 1,2 4 and 8-reel tanks.
>> But, at 74, I have to admit I’m simply not willing to go back to the game.
>>
>> So, earlier this week, I sold them all. Like a father watching
>> his offspring spring off to their own worlds, I hope they will find a home
>> where they will be as respected and as loved as I loved and respected them.
>>
>> I watched them disappear into a FedEx truck with a smile, a tear,
>> with great sadness and regret. It breaks my heart.
>>
>> I had to wait for the truck to leave. Sending them off was enough
>> of a betrayal. I couldn’t live with myself if they had seen me turn to the
>> computer to study the latest reviews of the Fuji X-Pro2.
>>
>> Farewell, my lovelies.
>>
>> —Bill
>>
>
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--
Tina Manley
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