Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/06/24

[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]

Subject: re: [Leica] m3's m6's 28mm lenses: bob kramer becomes a smart ass
From: rnkramer@mindspring.com
Date: Sat, 24 Jun 2000 15:46:51 -0400

- -----Original Message-----

>From: Kyle Cassidy <KCassidy@asc.upenn.edu>
>Subject: [Leica] m3's m6's 28mm lenses: bob kramer becomes a smart ass
>
>bob kramer got a little cheeky and took me to task for owning so many
>leicas:

No, no, no, Kyle.  You have it all wrong!  Two Leica bodies is not even
close to having to many Leicas.  In fact, I would argue that a serious
shooter like yourself  would need at *least* two bodies for easy access to
various film types, lenses, etc., as well as for the various camera features
(or camera disadvantages, depending on how you prefer to look at it).

Okay, so you didn't want to take your M6 into a bad neighborhood.  That's a
valid enough reason to use the beater with an aux. finder.   But just
becuase you haven't taken the time to learn how to effectively *use* the
beater/finder combo doesn't make it (the camera model in general, or that
camera in particular) a piece of junk -- that's the point I am trying to get
across.

Sorry if my cheekiness (I really like that term) irritated you.  Gosh...
even labeling me a smart ass in the subject line.  Not that it isn't true to
some degree or another  <vbg>.   But Kyle -- and you *know* I have much
admiration for you and your photographic talent -- I'm sorry, when you call
a camera model junk after an afternoon's use with an accessory whose use
isn't immediately intuitive to you, I'm afraid I am going to have to call BS
on that.  Hell, even one of those fancy featured-out-the-wazoo Nikon or
Canon autoexposure, autofocus, matrix/spot/program metering, fast as
lightning flash synch cameras probably takes more than an afternoon to
become comfortable with.

I'm not saying that you *ought* to give the M3 and finder more of a fair
trial.  If you don't like it, don't use it, I say.  Just realize that it is
your own personal preference based on how you want to shoot and the results
you want to get, not something intrinsically wrong with the gear.

Bob Kramer
Atlanta, GA