K
Ken Tanaka
Guest
You've gotten plenty of opinions, so by now you're probably thinking of just sticking with an SLR.
FWIW, I grabbed an M7 as my first rangefinder last December. Several reasons, which may or may not have bearing on your case.
1. The M7 is the state of the art for rangefinders. I hardly call aperture priority ae excessive "automation". It's a perfect feature for these cameras and can be easily turned off if you choose to shoot completely manually.
2. I generally don't buy anything used. I expected to use this camera for the rest of my life and particularly wanted to start fresh from frame zero.
3. The M7 offers everything worthwhile that any M has ever offered and, as I noted earlier, represents all of Leica's accumulated engineering refinements.
4. Starting from a lesser camera basically makes your eventual migration to a Leica M more expensive. Additionally, depending on what "lesser" camera you select, you may become discouraged due to poor results.
5. Starting with an new MP or M7 will likely enable you to recover a good portion of your expense if you decide to abandon rangefinder photography.
So my philosophy is to start the with best camera you can afford. Look, buying a rangefinder film camera today is an act of passion rather than reason. Starting with the best will enable you to "put down the damn camera", so to speak, and concentrate on photography rather than the camera that you don't yet have.
Have fun.
FWIW, I grabbed an M7 as my first rangefinder last December. Several reasons, which may or may not have bearing on your case.
1. The M7 is the state of the art for rangefinders. I hardly call aperture priority ae excessive "automation". It's a perfect feature for these cameras and can be easily turned off if you choose to shoot completely manually.
2. I generally don't buy anything used. I expected to use this camera for the rest of my life and particularly wanted to start fresh from frame zero.
3. The M7 offers everything worthwhile that any M has ever offered and, as I noted earlier, represents all of Leica's accumulated engineering refinements.
4. Starting from a lesser camera basically makes your eventual migration to a Leica M more expensive. Additionally, depending on what "lesser" camera you select, you may become discouraged due to poor results.
5. Starting with an new MP or M7 will likely enable you to recover a good portion of your expense if you decide to abandon rangefinder photography.
So my philosophy is to start the with best camera you can afford. Look, buying a rangefinder film camera today is an act of passion rather than reason. Starting with the best will enable you to "put down the damn camera", so to speak, and concentrate on photography rather than the camera that you don't yet have.
Have fun.