oscroft
Veteran
Very true, yes - that is a disadvantraage of the Bessa's short EBL.True, but if you want to use fast lenses, close up, at full aperture, the longer EBL of the ZI and Leica give them a useful edge over Voigtländer.
Very true, yes - that is a disadvantraage of the Bessa's short EBL.True, but if you want to use fast lenses, close up, at full aperture, the longer EBL of the ZI and Leica give them a useful edge over Voigtländer.
I guess I'm kind of boring in that I buy good lenses and then use them forever unless I can see some clearly obvious advantage to replacing them (like replacing my 70-200 2.8 L with the IS version when it came out). But I do have pro friends who are constantly buying the newest stuff, even when it makes no ultimate difference in their photos.
I can relate to the concept that some are more enjoyable to use than others, regardless of image quality.
Extremely rugged body, ultra high reliability, high simplicity of use, an incredible fascination, an incredible optical quality, testiomonials as Cartier Bresson, Capa, Erwitt, Duncan.
Ciao.
Vincenzo
Erwitt used also other cameras, including Nikon SLRs.
Roland.
Leicas are so expensive - and valuable - for what they DON'T have, not for qualities they do possess. To get less, you need to pay more!
To get less, you need to pay more!
Why? Because it gives grown men something to bitch about.
Dear Ronald,
Well, in my book, it's not the same. I'd rather have an M2 than an M7, because I really don't like battery dependency, but I prefer my MP to my M2 because I like the meter and the 75mm frame-line and a camera that's 40-50 years newer. Oh: and the black paint. Until I got Tom's rapid-winder I'd have said that the Leicavit was decisive too, but he's solved that one.
Also, "I can afford" is a complex statement. I could buy a dozen M8s tomorrow, but it would mean forgoing a lot of other things and grievously depleting our savings. "I can afford" has always to be taken in the context of "I want XYZ enough to afford it."
R.
Indeed. Quite possibly a troll, although the one other post the OP has looks genuine enough.OT: Curious that despite the many replies, the op didn't showed up yet...
There was a thread not long ago by a member in China who brought his new (M6, at least to him) to anelderly Zen Buddhist woodcarver. The man held the camera in his hands along with another camera. The elderly carver then stated to the effect about the Leica: With this you will take good pictures not with the other. As they say it is a Zen thing.
OT: Curious that despite the many replies, the op didn't showed up yet...
Indeed. Quite possibly a troll, although the one other post the OP has looks genuine enough.
There was a thread not long ago by a member in China who brought his new (M6, at least to him) to anelderly Zen Buddhist woodcarver. The man held the camera in his hands along with another camera. The elderly carver then stated to the effect about the Leica: With this you will take good pictures not with the other. As they say it is a Zen thing.
I don't know exactly which thread to stick this in, so I'm posting it here. I'm a relative newbie to the world of 35mm cameras. I have read numerous forums and spoken to many individuals who all say that Leica cameras are very good and recommend them highly. Without sounding rude, what makes these cameras so special?
For the full Leica experience, an M2 or M6 would do nicely. The M2 is less expensive and some would say has more of the 'classic' feel than the M6, but the M6 is extremely nice and has a highly accurate through-the-lens meter. My personal favorite is the M2 for its elegant simplicity and good looks. You can get a good Barnack (screwmount) Leica for very little money, but it is more of a camera for the confirmed Leica enthusiast and could easily turn off a Leica novice......Not wishing to fuel the healthy debate that there is already, can anyone recommend a relatively inexpensive Leica model for an amateur photographer who has never used one?
Not wishing to fuel the healthy debate that there is already, can anyone recommend a relatively inexpensive Leica model for an amateur photographer who has never used one?
The M2 and M3 are the purists' Leicas; the M2 has frames for 35-50-90 and the M3 for 50-90-135, but the M3 has a self-resetting frame counter while you have to reset it manually on the M2 (not really very difficult).Not wishing to fuel the healthy debate that there is already, can anyone recommend a relatively inexpensive Leica model for an amateur photographer who has never used one?