Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1996/02/10
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]At 07:05 AM 2/10/96 -0800, Kalessin@eworld.com wrote: >>>Imagine taking a $2000 M6 and a $2200 Summilux 35mm/f1.4 on a street >>>photography session. >mugging factor. > >My other cameras, the SLRs and the automated PnS stuff, seem to attract a lot >more attention than the Leica M does. In the case of the SLRs, the lenses are >much larger and the click-clack of the shutter and mirror immediately signals >that something is happening. The automated cameras, with their whirr/whine of >focus mechanisms and film advance rewind, also signal people that something >is going on. > >The Leica M is unobtrusive, the lenses are physically small (except for the >cannon of a 90mm f/2 that I have ;), and it makes only a very quiet snick ... >very few people even notice it's there, and fewer still notice that it's >anything expensive. Most who do see it think it's some kind of cheap camera >'cause it ain't got motor drive! > I agree --- your average junkie tends to go for the flashier, easier-to-fence SLRs and the like. I've noticed that an M6 attracts little attention on the street, though I stick a piece of black gaffer tape over the red Leica logo, which can act like a beacon when you're trying to blend into the background. When I'm traveling, though, as a rule I don't go through the lobby of whatever hotel I'm staying in with a camera hanging around my neck. As far as thieves go, hotel lobbies tend to attract connoisseurs. Wait until you get a block or so away before you pull anything out of the bag. Chuck Albertson Seattle, Wash.