Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2005/04/20

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Subject: [Leica] End of an Era, Tak of Mac Camera Retires
From: TTAbrahams at aol.com (TTAbrahams@aol.com)
Date: Wed Apr 20 12:38:08 2005

 It is obvious that the midrange collectibles are losing value quickly. In 
Tokyo the "mint" M3's and M4's are now at a price level that a couple of 
years 
ago would have got you a user version of the same camera. My feeling is that 
we 
are looking at an "adjustment" as the stock brokers call it.
Remember the classic car bubble in the 90's. Cars that sold for $10 million+ 
are now lingering at the specialist stores for 20-30% of that price with no 
takers even at that discount! 
 There are only so many collectors out there and most of them have all the 
rare stuff already. The big market was the collector/user market and that is 
changing as we speak. I am fairly typical of that market segment and albeit 
I am 
willing to pay fair value for a M2/M3 or Nikon SP I now have more than I can 
comfortably use (and justify). When I go to stores in Tokyo or to swap meet 
here in Vancouver I am no longer looking for cameras, I look for lenses, 
accessories and "gadgets" instead.
 The one camera that I am buying at the moment is the Nikon F - my 
justification is that I need several bodies for my experimental Rapidwinder 
F (extremely 
limited production of 6-7 of them) but truth be told - I just like that 
camera. It is one of the most brilliant designs in 35mm camera. You can add 
motors, 
meter prisms, special finders, etc. or you can strip it down to a basic box. 
Lenses are plentiful and cheap (and good!). Oh, it is noisy and not very 
sophisticated but that is the charm of that camera. It is the SLR equivalent 
of the 
Leica M2 or Nikon S2. Unfortunately other people have realised that too and 
prices are creeping up. "Beater" bodies used to be $ 50-75 and are now 
almost 
double that. On the other hand I can buy 8-10 of them for what a user M3 or 
M2 
would be! At the latest swap here in Vancouver I got a Nikon F with a Prism 
finder (dented and scratched but clear prism) and an early 28/3,5 for $120!
 Karen's hope for a clean Nikon SP for US$ 1500 is quite feasible. In the 
last year prices in Tokyo have dropped by almost 40% and will probably drop 
further after the introduction of the Limited Edition black paint Nikon SP. 
It is a 
gorgeous camera and I would dearly love one, but at $7000+ I can resist it 
(now the lens is an other matter - a modern 35/1,8 could be interesting and 
most 
likely a bit more flare resistant than my old one).
 As for the slow decline in black and white film availability - I suspect 
that in the future we will have to seek out speciality stores for our needs. 
Kodak claims that they will continue to make films like Tri-X for the 
foreseeable 
future (however, they did not define "foreseeable"). It could be that 
black/white film and chemicals will be more of an "artist" supply than an 
"imaging 
store" supply.
 The biggest problem is going to be chemicals - Kodak is getting out of it 
and even basic stuff like Metol, Hydroquinone, and Phenodine is  getting 
difficult to find and the prepackaged stuff - D76, Microdol-X etc. in the 
stores now 
is more often than not old stock. Well, pick up a copy of Steve Anchells' 
"Darkroom Cookbook" and make your own. The Photographers Formulary stocks 
most of 
everything you need and as a bonus - it is considerably cheaper than buying 
"ready-mix". We should remember that the idea of packaged developer is 
fairly 
recent. As late as the 50's it was quite common to mix your own from scratch 
(with the added benefit of adjusting formulas to your own shooting style).
 As for film, try the Chinese "Lucky" - its 400 ASA film is quite good. The 
base is different from Tri-X but the sharpness and grain is good (grain is 
finer than Tri-X). You can develop it as if it is Tri-X in D-76 but in Xtol 
it 
does not work very well (almost two stops off!) At $ 1,69/roll it is a 
bargain 
and as I buy film in quantity (600-1200 rolls at a time) a $2 saving per 
roll 
makes a big difference. The difference pays for a couple of interesting 
lenses 
or more camera bodies - or even more important - airline tickets to places I 
haven't been to yet!
 There seems to be enough interest among camera users to ensure that the old 
mechanical cameras will survive and the black/white devotees among us might 
have to change some of our ways, but for the foreseeable future I think we 
are 
safe. Maybe if enough of us ask Epson or HP for a dedicated black/white 
printer 
they will make it. I would use it for proofing but for final prints - 
nothing 
beats fiber base in a darkroom - at least in my opinion.
Tom A
---------------------
Tom Abrahamsson
Vancouver, BC
Canada
www.rapidwinder.com

Replies: Reply from lmc at interlink.es (Luis Miguel Castañeda) ([Leica] End of an Era, Tak of Mac Camera Retires)
Reply from s.dimitrov at charter.net (Slobodan Dimitrov) ([Leica] End of an Era, Tak of Mac Camera Retires)
Reply from vick.ko at sympatico.ca (Vick Ko) ([Leica] End of an Era, Tak of Mac Camera Retires)