LCSmith
Well-known
...would be to endow a school for Leica Rangefinder photography and supply the school with the collection of cameras and lenses. Let's dream a moment. Any other ideas for the school?
LC
LC
A Leica rangefinder photo school...... - why would one restrict a photo school to one brand or even just type of camera?
I'm a little sad for all great cameras that have to stay in a cupboard somewhere. Putting them to use is good.
I'm afraid a Leica rangefinder photo school would be a gear-centric, elitist affair - why would one restrict a photo school to one brand or even just type of camera? Just lend them to photographers and photo students on a project basis. An academic, youth or art institution could handle it.
There is a good reason Pentax K1000 is the most popular "students camera"- it's tough. Couple years ago I sourced nice kit of Nikon FM2s with lenses for art uni, most of them were broken after one semester, abused with brutal force and stupidity.
If they want a film camera, well they can just go and buy their own. That will cause them to treat it with somewhat more respect.
There is a good reason Pentax K1000 is the most popular "students camera"- it's tough. Couple years ago I sourced nice kit of Nikon FM2s with lenses for art uni, most of them were broken after one semester, abused with brutal force and stupidity.
"The coolest thing a collector could do" is put film in the camera and go out and take pictures, surely?
And would it take that much to explain how cameras and film/digital work? I mean what would they do on Tuesday afternoon?
Regards, David
Seeing that FM/FM2 kameras have been in places of conflict all over the world, they are plenty tough.
Irresponsible entitled idiots can break anything if they try hard enough.
The best thing any photo instructor could do is to have the student use a fully mechanical camera and a handheld light meter.
HCB, Capa, etc, all used rangefinders in their heyday not because they were better but because they were available, with the selection of lenses necessary to do the job. SLRs were available a bit later on, but the retrofocal lenses hadn't reached a level that matched what was available in the rangefinder camera lens selection.
Phil Forrest
The best thing any photo instructor could do is to have the student use a fully mechanical camera and a handheld light meter.
HCB, Capa, etc, all used rangefinders in their heyday not because they were better but because they were available, with the selection of lenses necessary to do the job. SLRs were available a bit later on, but the retrofocal lenses hadn't reached a level that matched what was available in the rangefinder camera lens selection. Yes, later on many used rangefinders but many amazing images have been made with cameras other than rangefinders, even "street" or "decisive moment" images.
The best thing a collector could do would probably be to sell that collection at top dollar then use that money to fund a real photo school. Or maybe just make a sizable donation to a public school arts program. You can buy 10 working K1000 bodies with fantastic lenses for every Leica body alone. Make this thing work, not just keep it limited to the most affluent and "entitled" like so many schools.
Phil Forrest
Right... 😡
Why so many Leica threads are turning into pooping parade?
What I do not understand is the idea of a Leica photo school, other than as a marketing tool for Leica. If the absurdity of that idea isn't apparent to you, think of something less close to your heart.
They don't have to, but your quibbling with Phil is a good way to get it moving.