Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/06/08
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I too cannot resist. I'm 23, and I use a Leica M2 with a 40 summicron (all I could afford and find surprisingly.) Its funny, because I've been wanting a Leica for about 3 years. I would go to every camera show searching for an inexpensive M2. Then just 2 or so months ago I finally got one. Waited another couple weeks then found a lens I can afford. I think younger generations like the really old stuff. I tell my friends what kind of camera I have and they are always so impressed that it's such an old camera, and think its really cool. It is the trend you know; this whole vintage thing. I dont know what my point is. It's frustrating because I can't buy a 35 summicron because it is around $750 and a nikkor equivalent is only $150. Alas, I shoot with one lens and I'm happy. Collectors drive the prices up so high (oddly they always seem to collect watches too). E-bay doesn't help either. It kills camera shows and flea markets. Enough of my rambling. At any rate.. The young people I meet seem to like the camera, but once they hear the price, they are instantly turned off.. >Sorry, but I couldn't resist responding. I'm a 28 year old Leica user who >started out by purchasing an a screwmount elmar 90. It was all i could >afford until my camera store took pity on me and allowed me to lay-by my >Leica III. I couldn't afford my M at that point, and, quite frankly, if i >tried to repeat the purchase of my M3 i couldn't do it again right now. >Peter raised an interesting point about Leica marketing missing the >Generation X market. Well I can honestly say I'm realistic about very >little, and yet I think that Leica has probably correctly pin-pointed their >market. Very few twenty-somethings can afford to buy Leica. That is an >almost unequivocal statement. The exceptions, like my amateur self, >probably started using cameras like my venerable old Dynax and discovered >something at the camera store that arrived second-hand and were captured by >the aesthetics and the history. That is, they were captured enough so that >they saved or gradually paid-off their Leica. When my best friend asked me >for camera advice i found out very quickly that he didn't really want it. >He couldn't overcome the belief that he had to buy something new-instantly, >with some form of international warranty, and it had to be an SLR with >Nikon or Canon stamped upon it. I think he is also representative of those >who appreciate the disposability of things. My M3 just looked too old and >esoteric. >Best wishes to you all, >Gary