I had no idea what a Leica was, I was that new to photography. The guy behind the counter at the pawnshhop on Hawthorne Blvd near the intersection with the 405 Freeway in Hawthorne Calif. proudly took the camera off a multi shelved wall of cameras, telling me that "it's a great Leica copy" -- as if I could possibly know what that was. $35 was a lot of money then, but it was a "Leica Copy" and had to be worth it ... right....
"It" turned out to be a Nicca III, a good copy of a Leica III. The baseplate proudly proclaims "Made In Occupied Japan" from about 1952 when General MacArthur still ruled Japan. It was my first rangefinder, as well as my first interchangeable lens camera! You guessed it, I still have it. %$#@! collector!
Actually I have a small collection of Niccas. My favorite is the lever advance version with the M3 back type film loading -- usually called the Nicca Type 5.
In time Nicca was bought out by Yashica, giving Yashica focal plane camera capability. Yashica went on to manufacture the Contax / Yashica SLRs -- until production stopped about two years ago.
Stephen
"It" turned out to be a Nicca III, a good copy of a Leica III. The baseplate proudly proclaims "Made In Occupied Japan" from about 1952 when General MacArthur still ruled Japan. It was my first rangefinder, as well as my first interchangeable lens camera! You guessed it, I still have it. %$#@! collector!
Actually I have a small collection of Niccas. My favorite is the lever advance version with the M3 back type film loading -- usually called the Nicca Type 5.
In time Nicca was bought out by Yashica, giving Yashica focal plane camera capability. Yashica went on to manufacture the Contax / Yashica SLRs -- until production stopped about two years ago.
Stephen