Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/07/05
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]You may not be a collector, but I am, and I became one as soon as I found myself owning more Leicas than I really could use on any one shoot or explain away as backup gear. This collector likes to be selective about what he owns, and prefers to own a lot less than he could. That is my preference; yours may vary. And yes, I really do think that offering up high quality scanned images of literature and packaging into the public domain is a great idea so long as they are out of copyright--this sort of thing should work very well as a sort of "collective collection" and it in no way hinders the efforts of paper collectors. Jeff Segawa no archive Dan Cardish wrote: > > Who are you to say what is worth owning? Having you or a thousand people > like you state that Leicas aren't worth owning means nothing to the people > who think that Leica ARE worth owning. Like I said, I am not a collector, > but I sure as hell am not about to stop someone else from being one. And > as I tried to imply, Leicas seem as worthy to collect as postage stamps or > coins (or train sets). > > I mean, really! > > Dan C. > > At 06:04 AM 04-07-00 -0600, you wrote: > >Dan Cardish wrote: > >> > >> I'm not a collector, but looking through the books I own on Leicas, I can > >> certainly see the appeal. There are so many models going back so many > >> years, and there are all the model variations. It seems virtually > >> impossible to amass a complete collection, and this is probably the main > >> motivation for collectors. > >> > >> Why not indeed? > > > >Because not everything is worth owning? I enjoy being shown a fine > >collection and absorbing some of the lore, but being a museum curator is > >not one of my life's ambitions! A few (extra) pieces that actually mean > >something are plenty for me. I used to own Lionel trains and I thought > >that some of the sought-after variations were actually kind of ugly, so > >I never went that route. Instead, I'd just pick up a item here or there > >if I thought it'd be fun to fuss with; If I didn't find myself playing > >with it much, I'd sell it, so out went all of the F3 locomotives and > >even a magnificent scale NYC Hudson loco! I think I bought camera > >equipment, made investments and went travelling with some of the > >proceeds and in retrospect think that was a fine idea. > > > >Idea for Leica box-collectors: Make high quality scans of all sides of > >the box and distribute the images freely so that anyone with a photo > >printer can build a fine replica! Let's flood the market with all sorts > >of nice free scans of manuals, warranty cards and misc junk so that > >everyone who wants one can have one and we can get this out of our > >systems already. I'll start by offering a pretty nice PDF of a > >Hasselblad 500c manual I made awhile back (must be around here somewhere > >on one of my disks) > > > >Jeff Segawa > > > >no archive > > > >