Early Leica Literature 1925-1929

Jim Lager

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Leitz literature prepared between 1925-1929 traces the availability of the Leica A.

In January 1925 Leitz Literature proudly proclaimed the wonders of the LECA camera! WooHoo! So far, we have yet to find a LECA engraved camera.

By mid 1925 the name had been changed to Leica. The illustrations show a sampling of early advertising.

As Lindbergh flew the Atlantic in 1927 and the Graf Zeppelin completed a round the world trip in 1929, the Leica began to gain acceptance.

Pre 1930 literature can be considered rarer than the Leica itself. Many early cameras have survived but most advertising material has been lost over the past nine decades.

Jlager_Lit_1925.01.jpg

1925 LECA Camera

Jlager_Lit_1926-1927.jpg

1926-1927

Jlager_Lit_1927.01.jpg

1927 Notice Leitz offices already in New York, San Francisco and Manila!

Jlager_Lit_1927.02.jpg

1927

Jlager_Lit_1927.11.jpg

November 1927


Jlager_Lit_1928.03.jpg

March 1928


Jlager_Lit_1928.12.jpg

December 1928

Jlager_Lit_1928.13.jpg

1928

Jlager_Lit_1929.01.jpg

1929

Jlager_Lit_1929.11.jpg

1929
 
Interesting to see these!
Would those early cameras have had a dealer label or something identifying who sold them? How were they packed/boxed for sale?

Rob
 
Very interesting to read, Jim!

I have a question somewhat related to this, a couple of months ago I visited an exhibition called 100 years of Leica photography, in Madrid, and there they showed some early documents with prints and a chart next to them indicating lens, film, developer, etc.

I found these very interesting and can't seem to find them online, do you know anything about them?

Thank you and welcome to RFF!
 
He was very stylish, the graphics guy who did that. I think he was one of the artists who fell out of favour with the regime after 1933...
 
And from what was then Palestine:

img019 by dralowid, on Flickr

FODIS, FOKUN or even FOCUX anyone?
leaflets4207 by dralowid, on Flickr

By 1929 the cover on the left had changed...Jim's is 1925. Now the name has settled on Leica and we have a Leica logo (which of course wasn't on the cameras.

leaf204 by dralowid, on Flickr

I enjoy this literature, particularly the bits of equipment that we never hear about these days, after all, if you are promoting 35mm you need to be able to supply everything related.

Michael
 
Very interesting to read, Jim!

I have a question somewhat related to this, a couple of months ago I visited an exhibition called 100 years of Leica photography, in Madrid, and there they showed some early documents with prints and a chart next to them indicating lens, film, developer, etc.

I found these very interesting and can't seem to find them online, do you know anything about them?

Thank you and welcome to RFF!

I saw the same exhibition. The quality of the prints were outstanding!
 
AFAIK is the first time that the Leica was mentioned in a Dutch publication was in the fourth printing of Idzerda's "Handboekje der Praktische Fotografie", Amsterdam Sloterdijk 1928. Idzerda was wrong about the format of the negatives of the Leica however.

On the same page other interesting cameras are shown, such as the Krauss Eka, the first small camera of Cartier-Bresson.

Erik.

37068977175_2a53c4d532_c.jpg
 
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