Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/10/17
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]>>>You speak in the past tense. Do you no longer use Leica cameras? -- Anthony<<< Now you're going to get me in trouble! I'm about to lose ALL credibility here. <g> You have to remember that I'm not always my own man in this area. Because of my job, I spend a lot of time "living with" cameras that would not necessarily be my choice for spending my own money on. In the lastest issue of _PHOTO Techniques_ I've written a full feature review of the Contax Aria. I really do feel that any camera manufacturer deserves a reviewer who really commits to the camera for a significant chunk of time, and who really "comes to grips" with it, as Andrew Mattheson once wrote that you can do with the M. It used to be my personal standard when I was reviewing cameras for _Camera & Darkroom_ that I would use the camera in question for my own work for at least 3 full months. I used the Aria off and on for almost 8 months, and even got myself a few assignments to use it for. This is just a matter of principle for me; most "camera reviews" are just padded-out recitations of the spec sheet, with a few tepid, vague, approving sentences of opinion tacked on here and there. I really feel that our readers, who are generally knowledgeable and experienced (like most of the people here), deserve more than that. It's impossible for any one reviewer to be truly objective, but at least he can be thorough. And, sometimes, I don't spend my money on cameras I otherwise might buy, simply because I know I'm going to need to "clear the decks" for the next camera to be reviewed. But (<*sigh*>--here goes my cred <g>) no, at the moment I have no Leica M. I'm shooting with a Nikon F100, courtesy of Nikon. I've also been using a number of 1970s cameras for an article I'm piecing together called "Classic Metal Boxes of the 1970s." I have a Nikon EL2, a Pentax Spotmatic F, and a Leica R3 in the cabinet for that project. The project evolved from my interest in the cameras and their lenses, not the other way around. In the interest of honesty, I have to confess that so far I absolutely love the F100. It's a totally different style of photography than the M6--it's a big ol' point-and-shoot with tailor-it-yourself features. But I find it really nicely thought out, very controllable, and just super to use--the autofocus gloms on to anything, even in near-darkness, and doesn't seem to know the meaning of the word "hunt." The viewfinder is as bright as life and somewhat *more* contrasty than my own eyes! Very nice. With its giant handgrip and high-eyepoint finder, plus the fact that it's large for its weight and thus feels rather light, it's probably the most comfortable camera I've ever used, for whatever that's worth. And it gets my second-place award for Best Noise during its shutter release...second only to the M6 and its bretheren. Which--yes, y'all--are unparalleled, as I need not even bother to say. For a number of years now I've been interested in making photography _less_ easy...learning to pre-focus an M6 by feel and eye judgement, learning to expose film in an M4 without carrying a meter, learning how to deal with older and used lenses of more restricted performance than modern ones, learning how to do everything with a 50mm lens to the exclusion of other focal lengths. These have been useful challenges to me personally. The Nikon is just the opposite experience--it makes photography very easy again. At this point, this is something that feels extraordinarily luxurious to me, and I admit I'm basking in it...for the time being, anyway. My credibility here is now officially and totally trashed. I know I might as well slink away right now, since nobody will ever listen to me again. <gg> However, another camera that has impressed me far out of proportion to its reputation is the R3. Ever since its introduction, this camera has been saddled with, and tainted by, its status as the first "Japanese" Leica, from a time when Japanese manufacture still had a slight aroma of cheapness, flimsiness, and lack of prestige clinging to it, and Leica's collusion with Minolta had about it an air of admitting defeat. The R3 has never recovered from that initial reception. It has never had much of a reputation, as is reflected in its very low prices right now and its lack of collectability. From a user's standpoint, however, I find this lack of acceptance and poor reputation almost totally groundless. I am really surprised by this camera. By today's standards--with polycarbonate now ubiquitous--the R3 is a TANK, solid and hefty. It may have seemed "lightweight" or cheaper compared to the SL and SL2, but even compared to the R4-R7 and certainly in comparison to the average Wunderplastik of today it comes off very well indeed in this regard. The viewfinder is exceptionally bright, the smooth analog needle has the look of bygone-era quality, and the shutter release and action is very pleasing indeed--very solid and smooth. Winding is a bit light but certainly smooth. The exposure system strikes me as nearly perfect for an AE SLR. Again, we have to remember the historical context--the R3 came out in an era when "multi-mode" cameras were the hot, coming thing, and many cameras had only one mode--witness the "matched set" of different cameras centered around the best-selling shutter-priority Canon AE-1 that each had only one exposure mode. Cameras that offered more and more modes were all the rage, and were driving the market. And remember how "space age" the Canon A-1 seemed? Remember when every new camera HAD to have program mode simply to survive in the marketplace? We can smile, but only in retrospect. In context, at that time, the R3's choice of only centerweighted aperture-priority AE or spot AEL might have seemed not quite at the cutting edge, easily dismissed. But now that all that "mode-mania" has calmed down, and all exposure modes (aperture-priority, shutter-priority, manual, and program) are commonplace even on cheap cameras, the R3's sensible, restrained, but cunning combination seems just perfect to me. I would rank it second only to Maitani's excellent system on the OM-4T for ideal usability in an SLR. Like most cameras of its vintage, the R3 is getting a little old now, with mint samples fewer and further between, and electronic failures are more common than in newer cameras of its relative price-point. But I think it is a victim of an overwhelming perception problem that it has never been able to overcome--but that is fundamentally simply WRONG when the camera is placed more objectively in context. It's really quite a wonderful camera. At the prices it sells for today, it is a flat-out steal. I'll bet in 10 years, R3 prices will have skyrocketed. Bookmark that crystal ball. And I won't even get into the fact that I rank the R lens line higher than the M line on my list of the world's best lens lines. (Oops! "Pandora's Box Effect" begins!) I imagine I have only a day or two left on the LUG before I depart again--my workload and e-mail traffic just don't allow me to linger very long. But one more comment I mustn't forget to add is that I agree wholeheartedly with Dan Khong's astute assessment of what you want in a portrait lens. And no, a Softar filter won't get you there. A great portrait lens is something to be truly prized--they are rare, and they are never "sharpness champs." Skulking away, - --Lowdown Wuthless F100-Using Mike