Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/11/22
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I have it on very good authority that AA used Jockey shorts as his brand for cleaning his Leica lenses. You can look it up or ask John Sexton. Rob Mueller Studies in Black and White www.studiesinblackandwhite.com rob@studiesinblackandwhite.com - -----Original Message----- From: Ted Grant [mailto:tedgrant@islandnet.com] Sent: Sunday, November 21, 1999 9:48 AM To: leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us Subject: Re: [Leica] Re: lens chamois Mike wrote: >OK concerning lens chamois: I've always been paranoid about using the same >thing twice to clean a lens.>>>> Hi Mike, I guess I should give you the "old Ted" cleaning cloth tip! :) This goes for any of you new folks who have not tried it. We are always talking about Leica glass, trust me it's much tougher than most of you give it credit. Some of you would "blanch white" with heart palpatations, while watching Leica technical people clean lens surfaces with good old fashion elbow grease, heavy breathing on the glass and vigorously rubbing the cloth round and round very quickly. There is nothing like some "heavy breathing" on the lens and rubbed with a swatch of well worn, "well washed" bottom section cut from your "seat made" under shorts!:) Nice soft cotten! Been getting secondary use from well worn under shorts for years and they don't cost a penny, as they become a "Re-cycled commodity!" Certainly after you have created them into "lens cleaning cloth" due to the hundreds of times you have sat on them and ground them into soft lint proof lens cleaning cloth. Why spend money for a chamois when your riding on the best cleaning material you can find? Particularly when it's free! :) Laugh if you like, but it works and instead of throwing those old under shorts away, cut the ass part out and make the finest lens cleaning cloth you can find. And they are expendable. ted I know that the Inuit used to keep a single ptarmagan skin in >the igloo to clean their dishes all winter, but this is a lens for crying >out loud! Ted Grant This is Our Work. The Legacy of Sir William Osler. http://www.islandnet.com/~tedgrant