dpn
Newbie
Hey everyone,
A few weeks ago, I acquired a large pile of Leica Photography magazines. I found them absolutely fascinating to read, and decided that I needed to make them available to anyone curious about early Leitz/Leica history. They're filled with really wonderful information about the early days of 35mm photography, and have some surprisingly relevant articles. For example, there's an early feature on Mary Ellen Mark (Vol. 21, No. 1: Spring 1968) and a fun article on enhancing edge adjacency effects with Rodinal (Vol. 22, No. 1: Spring 1969).
I invested in a book scanner and have spent a lot of time scanning, correcting, OCRing, and indexing 78 old issues of Leica Photography magazine from 1949 through 1971, with some bonus issues of Leica Fotografie and Leica View from the 80s and 90s. There are gaps and missing issues in my collection, but I'm working to obtain and scan some of the missing issues with some contacts in the LHSA and from the Leica forum.
Figuring out a way to make these historic reference materials available to anyone who is interested for free has been interesting. I've been corresponding with folks from the LHSA, who are in the process of preparing their own digitized archive for LHSA members to use for research. I obtained an unofficial blessing and some guidance on their stance regarding copyright of these old historic reference materials, and I'm providing them under the umbrella of fair use for research and reference purposes. I have not yet connected with anyone from Leica Camera, and would appreciate any contacts y'all might have.
These magazines are freely downloadable from my archive site:
https://leicaphotographyarchive.wordpress.com/
I've put up a Paypal donation button, with proceeds going to offset the cost of the book scanner, allow me to purchase and scan missing issues, and address any bandwidth or hosting issues that might come up (the archives themselves live in a publicly-accessible Google Drive folder for now).
Please let me know what you think -- feedback is cheerfully welcomed.
All the best,
Dan
A few weeks ago, I acquired a large pile of Leica Photography magazines. I found them absolutely fascinating to read, and decided that I needed to make them available to anyone curious about early Leitz/Leica history. They're filled with really wonderful information about the early days of 35mm photography, and have some surprisingly relevant articles. For example, there's an early feature on Mary Ellen Mark (Vol. 21, No. 1: Spring 1968) and a fun article on enhancing edge adjacency effects with Rodinal (Vol. 22, No. 1: Spring 1969).
I invested in a book scanner and have spent a lot of time scanning, correcting, OCRing, and indexing 78 old issues of Leica Photography magazine from 1949 through 1971, with some bonus issues of Leica Fotografie and Leica View from the 80s and 90s. There are gaps and missing issues in my collection, but I'm working to obtain and scan some of the missing issues with some contacts in the LHSA and from the Leica forum.
Figuring out a way to make these historic reference materials available to anyone who is interested for free has been interesting. I've been corresponding with folks from the LHSA, who are in the process of preparing their own digitized archive for LHSA members to use for research. I obtained an unofficial blessing and some guidance on their stance regarding copyright of these old historic reference materials, and I'm providing them under the umbrella of fair use for research and reference purposes. I have not yet connected with anyone from Leica Camera, and would appreciate any contacts y'all might have.
These magazines are freely downloadable from my archive site:
https://leicaphotographyarchive.wordpress.com/
I've put up a Paypal donation button, with proceeds going to offset the cost of the book scanner, allow me to purchase and scan missing issues, and address any bandwidth or hosting issues that might come up (the archives themselves live in a publicly-accessible Google Drive folder for now).
Please let me know what you think -- feedback is cheerfully welcomed.
All the best,
Dan