Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/08/28
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]In the July/August 1995 issue of Darkroom & Creative Camera Techniques, Carl Weese wrote a piece called The Leica Mystique. This piece was reprinted and distributed by Leica. As a long time Leica user, I found it to be very interesting. I've included a (very) few excerpts below and can send the entire piece as e-mail to anyone who is interested. Just let me know if you want it. The original piece is about 16,000 characters. Bud Cook - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- ............'Leica partisans may display a loyalty that seems truly fanatic, but they seldom engage in one-on-one comparisons with other cameras because, quite simply, there is no competition for the Leica M. A 35mm, all manual, interchangeable-lens, optical rangefinder camera, the M is not only the original but also the only surviving example of its breed. Its adherents go beyond brand loyalty in their attachment to this camera; for many, the relationship can truly be described as a romance.' Ergonomics .................'It is a miracle of ergonomics, designed before the very term came into common use. This is of no small importance. The ergonomic comfort of the camera is the first element of the intense shooting style it fosters, which influences the pictures Leica photographers make. It is this shooting style which I suspect is at the heart of the Leica Mystique.' Those Leica Lenses ................... '35 mm Summilux (f/1.4) was a breakthrough lens when it was introduced and its design reflects a number of compromises. Wide open, it has very low contrast (that as we've just seen can be beneficial) and also suffers from coma, which renders point light sources as smeared shapes. I think this defect is so beautiful, that while my standard 35 mm lens is now the current Summicron, I keep and use my 27-year-old Summilux for it's unique, idiosyncratic image qualities.' Camera Handling: The Leica Style ...........'By contrast there is nothing seductive about the view through the Leica's finder. It's just a one-eyed look at the world tinted slightly blue and reduced to three-quarters life size.' ............'With AF, when making a fast shot it is all too easy to make pictures perfectly focused on the wrong thing. Or to make sharply focused images with the invariable stylistic device of a main subject dead center in the frame. With this pre-focus technique you can shoot at lightning speed while using the viewfinder purely for framing. This can lead to better pictures.' Leica Technique ........'Totally manual control, rangefinder viewing and focusing, dimunutive size, quiet operation, specialized lenses maximized for certain shooting conditions; this is a set of attributes that stakes out a specific photographic territory for the Leica. If these attributes are the perfect ones for the kind of pictures a photographer wants to make, it may be the only tool that is needed.'