Did you see this?

Not something one sees every day............

Sadly, it is very very far out of my price range, and even if I were to win a major lottery, I would not be able to determine the balance between its great rarity and its staggering price.

I have always had a problem in accepting the notion that rarity by itself makes something inherently valuable; what real difference is there between this camera and one from a few years later with more digits in its serial number and an Elmar lens? I cannot put a price tag on the historical value, and I certainly cannot afford the one the vendor has assigned.

There are many people on the list here who have variously-modified Leicas. Many of those cameras are not only rare, but unique. I suspect it would be difficult to sell any of them for sixteen thousand pounds.

Cheers,
Dez
 
I have always had a problem in accepting the notion that rarity by itself makes something inherently valuable; what real difference is there between this camera and one from a few years later with more digits in its serial number and an Elmar lens? I cannot put a price tag on the historical value, and I certainly cannot afford the one the vendor has assigned.

Rarity within itself isn't valuable, it's just a simplified measure of supply and demand. The "real difference" between this one and one a few years later is that there are more of the later version to go around. When you have only so many of something, prices go up until you reach the breaking point of who wants it most, that's how we end up with a $25,000 camera.
 
There has to be strong demand (lots of potential buyers) for a rare item to sell for these stratospheric amounts. And, they have to be speculators. In other words, the prices for the rare item have to have a strong, constant track record of increasing. Buyers see this increase, like the line on a stock chart or the home sales in their neighborhood and make the fatal assumption; "It will always go up." So they buy even higher.

This is the definition of a bubble, and one day, perhaps, there are fewer buyers. That is because the "regular user" buyers drop out early, and eventually the "speculator" buyers do too. It has happened with early american art, vintage cars and guitars, etc. Those that bought high, are hosed.

There are a lot of lenses a lot rarer than this, but they are not worth a fraction. Because there are few speculators using them for "investments."
 
Back
Top Bottom