Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/07/30
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]At 06:02 PM 7/30/97 -0400, you wrote: > >You folks really must live in areas with some high-quality thugs. Hell, I >DEFEND these guys in Court, and I've yet to have a criminal client who knew >what in blazes a Leica was. A 'camera', sure, they'll steal a 'camera' -- >but they'd take a tinny P&S over a Leica any day of the week, as it looks >more expensive. These guys are DUMB, or they wouldn't be street thieves. >They simply don't know the market, and the fences are almost as >ill-informed. A pawn shop might know the true value -- but, contrary to >their image, most pawn shops are honest operations. > >Now, random violence against street photographers, sure, that's a >possibility. But I doubt if more than 1% of our criminal element are as >brand-conscious as some seem to think. > >Marc > This was basically my point some months ago when someone said that they were embarrassed to take pictures of villages and farmers in India with Leica equipment. I think I responded at that time that the MAJORITY of the people EVERYWHERE, do not know what a Leica is. It's just a camera to 99.9% of the masses, thugs or not. Run into another photographer, and you stand a chance that he will have heard the name Leica. I wear a small round red Leica pin on my lapel, every day of the year. Over the ten years that I have been doing this, I have been asked thousands of times "what does the pin say." It's quite obvious that they don't recognize the Leica logo. And when I reply "Leica" they respond "what's that." I contend that the majority of everybody, thugs included, have no clue as to what a Leica is, and simply are aware that someone is taking pictures with a camera. Jim