Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/06/14
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I wish I had taken notes on my life as the dates and memories have begun to get fuzzy but I can clearly remember my first contact with Leica as if it were yesterday. I was fourteen in 1959 and came across a brand new Leica M3 with 50mm Summicron in my Dad's gear closet as I was rummaging around for film for my Voigtlander. I knew I would incur the wrath of my father if he knew I had "played" with his beloved Leica but I held it dearly and operated the aperture ring and shutter while looking through the viewfinder hardly believing how smooth the focusing and other controls operated. It was the most beautiful and perfectly manufactured object that I had ever seen and held. The bug bit me right then and there. I would have to wait until 1972 when I was 27 and a resident in diagnostic radiology at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital in Philadelphia until I was able to buy my own Leica. I bought a Leica M4 chrome with 50mm Summicron which I proceeded to use with a passion around Head House Square and Society Hill Phila. I shot many pictures of my future wife with that camera and have fond memories of that time together. I had purchased my first Leica from The Photo-Cine Shop on 18th St. in Phila. The owner George ( whose last name escapes me) took a liking to me and would inform me whenever anything interesting in Leica turned up. I had joined the LHSA and met some local collectors but on a resident's salary ($9,000 at the time) I could hardly afford much of what I desired. Nevertheless, I was able to purchase the entire 50 Jahre series from George and a KE-7A with Elcan lens both of which I have to this day. Marriage and my first child soon followed. My military obligation which had been deferred for residency would now have to be met and I pulled some strings in 1975 to get a US Army assignment overseas. I was sent to the 2nd General Army Hospital in Landstuhl Germany for two years. Living with Germans off base and shunning the military except when on duty enabled me to blend into European culture almost as a native. My Leica purchases continued and I now added a Leicaflex SL2 camera and lens system to my growing M4 system. These would be the best years of my life so much so that my wife and I were reluctant to return home and fantasized for a while about becoming German. But as much as we traveled in Germany and around Europe we never made it to Wetzlar! Love of our mutual families demanded we return to the states and I had taken a job in Carlisle Pa as a radiologist. We would soon find Lancaster more desirable and moved there in 1981 where we still reside. We now had two more children and lots of responsibilities so Leica purchases were deferred. Other than snaps of the kids I did less serious photography. When George sold the Photo-Cine shop I lost contact with that establishment and began doing business with the upstart Tamarkin and Co. Leica R4, Leica R7 and more M gear including three M6s followed over the ensuing years but I was not really photographically active. I even purchased a Canon EOS system to aid my aging eyes but found it user unfriendly and lacking in what attracted me to Leica. I have given it to my youngest son. Two years ago I did a western photo oriented trip to Bryce Canyon and Zion National Park which has rekindled my interest in photography. I used a Leica R7 and 6.2 exclusively on that trip. I still use the R7 and a M6 about equally finding the R system invaluable for tele and macro shots, landscape and nature photography but the M system a joy for general 28-90mm shooting especially of people. Leically Yours, Paul T. Collura M.D.