rulnacco
Well-known
These days, if 135mm is your thing, you can get the newer Tele-Elmar for around $250 on Ebay..
Yep, that's a sweet lens--I really like mine. But at the same time, it doesn't have the cool & funky factor of the original Elmar--or the built-in tripod mount, quite handy if you need it. The Tele-Elmar is a perfectly functional and extremely capable but somewhat drab-looking piece of kit, while the Elmar is this baroque precision instrument in glorious chromed brass and vulcanite. The Tele-Elmar is a 1976 Chevy Impala, the Elmar is a 1964 Mercury Park Lane in terms of looks.
I kind of hated to sell my original Elmar, even though I wasn't using it much. It was not only a nice lens, it had a bit of historical cachet, too: its prior owner was Douglas Webb, a veteran of the World War 2 Dambusters raid, who went on to become a photographer of some note--and considerable notoriety. Along with his life partner and muse, Pamela Green, who was even more notorious (and somewhat historical herself) for a particular scene in the 1960 film Peeping Tom. I hoped that maybe he had perhaps used the lens to take some risqué photos of Pamela on occasion. (You can look all that up if you're so inclined--it's an interesting story.)
That's part of the fun of Leica gear--it has a life independent of its current owner. I frequently wonder who used to own my various cameras (I have an M3 and M6) and lenses--all purchased second-hand--and what kind of photos they had taken before I met them. And I'm pretty sure my gear will go on living and shooting long after I'm dead and dust.