Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/07/25

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Subject: Re: Leica M4: To buy or not to buy, that is the question
From: "Gary Todoroff" <datamaster@humboldt1.com>
Date: Fri, 25 Jul 1997 23:27:48 -0700

- ----------
> From: Dave Munroe <dmunroe@hpvclmun.vcd.hp.com>
> I don't exactly "need" another camera right now -- I've got plenty, so
it's probably
> best to wait for that pristine M4 to eventually show up.
> 
Be careful - If it's too pretty, you may be tempted to "baby" it or forgo
using it altogether! When yearning for my own Leica long ago, I loved to
watch from my humble position as a studio assistant at how the
photojournalists respectfully tossed their Leica's around. It made me think
of my wrenches and socket sets back home - great tools that got greasy and
scratched a bit as they faithfully did the job in my hands.  Then I would
appreciatively clean and store them for the next project.

Leica's can be like that. When I got my M6 about four years ago, one of the
first things I did was take it out on a rainy day to photograph
rhododendrons and gravestones. It got almost as wet as I did and recorded
some wonderfully saturated colors against the grays. Looking back, it was
as tho my M6 and I were coming to terms at the beginning of a long
relationship. Kind of a bonding experience; "I won't make you do anything I
wouldn't suffer myself, so don't expect to be coddled."

One of life's subtle pleasures is the thoughtful grooming of lenses and M
bodies at the end of a day of photography: respecting the amazing tool that
I hardly thought about during the shooting because of its transparency to
my eyes and hands; sorting the jumble of lenses back into their standard
places in the case; chamois-clothing the finger prints out of finder
windows; running the shutter thru all the speeds ostensibly to keep them
loose, but mostly just to hear that delicious sound just for the sound's
sake.

Yes, I have my "collectibles", mostly from the screw mount era, but I don't
baby my M's. So get something with scratches, even a dent or two. Then
chance a few more by pushing, risking, and probing the limits until you
know that your Leica has given you something rare and wonderful.

You see.

Gary Todoroff