julianphotoart
No likey digital-phooey
This is a strange (to me anyway) little excerpt from the April 2006 LFI Magazine -- which isn't exactly objective on Leica. Article re a big-time Thai collector named Surat Osathanugrah who has 2000 Leica pieces (including M3 #700000 bought for E95000). The excerpt discusses the Japanese market. It reads:
"Can it be true? Someone who collects cameras and also takes pictures? This combination surely separates Surat Osathanugrah from a species that many active photographs find hard to understand, as described by photo columnist Michael Reichmann in a little anecdote (www.luminous-landscape.com) from a trip to Japan. There, he was fascinated by the market orientation of camera stores, in which countless mint-condition Leicas of all generations were being accumulated. Many of these cmaeras and lenses were shrink-wrap sealed, and when Reichmann expressed an interest for a particularly beautiful Leica IIIg, he asked the sales person whether he could remove the foil so that he, Reichmann, could have a go with the camera. The salesman burst out with laughter. Puzzled, Reichmann asked what was so funny. That was when he learned that the packaging would never, under any circumstances, ever be removed -- not even by the buyer. The clients would take the cameras and lenses home and add them to their collection just as they had been displayed in the store, sealed in plastic like a rare comic book. To go out and actually take pictures with a (sic) exotic piece like that? One had to be joking."
Thought it might be interesting/humourous.
Julian
"Can it be true? Someone who collects cameras and also takes pictures? This combination surely separates Surat Osathanugrah from a species that many active photographs find hard to understand, as described by photo columnist Michael Reichmann in a little anecdote (www.luminous-landscape.com) from a trip to Japan. There, he was fascinated by the market orientation of camera stores, in which countless mint-condition Leicas of all generations were being accumulated. Many of these cmaeras and lenses were shrink-wrap sealed, and when Reichmann expressed an interest for a particularly beautiful Leica IIIg, he asked the sales person whether he could remove the foil so that he, Reichmann, could have a go with the camera. The salesman burst out with laughter. Puzzled, Reichmann asked what was so funny. That was when he learned that the packaging would never, under any circumstances, ever be removed -- not even by the buyer. The clients would take the cameras and lenses home and add them to their collection just as they had been displayed in the store, sealed in plastic like a rare comic book. To go out and actually take pictures with a (sic) exotic piece like that? One had to be joking."
Thought it might be interesting/humourous.
Julian