Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/06/18
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]To respond to the question Alan raised in the subject header of his thoughtful post - absolutely not. True, there were those who dismissed out of hand the very idea of the first Leicas. And, yes, the camera was small, slight, quiet, unobtrusive, and forced the photographer to get "up close and personal." But, and this is an enormous BUT, an objective analyst wouldn't have described the Leica the way you, Alan, described your little Russian beauty, as having "almost every distortion in the book." No, the Leica did not and does not produce images of a quality that compares to those produced by large format cameras, but the Leica was and is a quality piece of optical and mechanical eqiupment. As strange as it may sound, if you're looking for the heirs to the early Leicas, look to today's quality Point & Shoots. Some of them literally slip in a shirt pocket, they have sharp optics, they have good metering and autofocus, they have good flash, and they allow you to carry a camera anywhere and everywhere, to get shots you might otherwise never get. As an aside, I have to say that while the collecting of Leicas might make Barnack proud, it should make every working photographer seethe - no insult intended to the collectors on this list. The reason that used Leica equipment is so damn expensive is that so much of it has been snapped up by collectors who lock it away in cabinets for display and "investment" purposes. As the supply of available equipment dwindles, the price rises. The collectors win, but the shooters, priced out of the market, lose.