raid
Dad Photographer
Hi,
I wish idiots were optional on some forums. Not aimed at anyone on this forum, btw; we are lucky on RFF...
Regards, David
No, they are not optional.
😀
Hi,
I wish idiots were optional on some forums. Not aimed at anyone on this forum, btw; we are lucky on RFF...
Regards, David
Exactly, the issue doesn't necessarily center on the comparative expense account for the cameras' guts, but on the final price. The digital M, which is Leica's top end full frame 35mm camera, cost around the same as Nikon's and Canon's top end full frame 35mm cameras.
Yes, I think we all get it; the DSLRs are jam-packed with goodies. But those goodies are irrelevant if you don't need or want them. In the end, no matter how sophisticated and electronically equipped a DSLR is, it will never be a rangefinder. And if one needs or wants a digital rangefinder, the only current option is the Leica M series, and this uniqueness itself constitutes a notable premium.
The point is that someone paying more than US$6,000 to US$7,000 on a DSLR, or one who sees such pricing reasonable for a high-end camera, is really not in position to then paint Leica owner's as chic-driven show offs enslaved to conspicuous consumption.
Moreover, if someone wanted to showoff their goods in a way that's going to attract the general public, not just other photographers, are they going to hang a rangefinder around their neck or a large DSLR strutting a huge telephoto lens?
One would have to be drenched in immeasurable levels of naiveté to think that a good number of photographers don't, in part, buy large DSLRs to flaunt as some type of a suburban status symbol. In fact, numerically speaking, the number of people who use their DSLRs as jewelry is likely much higher than those similarly using a Leica for no other reason than the limited number of Leica users altogether.
But here's the thing, it's not the camera's fault how it is used, abused, or appropriated. If someone uses a Leica or a large glaringly white L lens to announce his or hers materialistic triumphs (and yes, this happens!), it doesn't suddenly render ALL Leica's or white L lenses as ineffectual decoration.
Yet, it just seems that certain people too dismissively target all Leica's as just the accouterments of the ostentatious, as though the cameras could serve no other purpose. To be sure, for such criticism and negative perception, Leica is partly (largely) to blame, as it does push and profit well from its boutique persona...and many of its limited editions even raise the ire of some of the company's most loyal customers. But again, does this mean that a digital Leica M is just a superfluous luxury item that holds no practical value to an earnest photographer? Of course not!
But as always, it gets a little more complicated. The guy flaunting his Leica or John Holmesian L lens might also use these accessories to photograph, and possibly even photograph well. Fashion and industrial design are not mutually exclusive of functionality, and while this might come as a shock, some people, for example, will buy a certain car because a) it will get them from point A to point B, and b) it looks good.
Yes, Leica's are expensive, and yes, celebrities are drawn to the company's name brand (also it's small size I would figure), but the Leica M is ultimately a camera, and for those seeking a digital rangefinder, Leica is the only answer (outside the older Epsons). And as long as Leica is the only company making a full frame digital rangefinder, I would argue that in this sense, and perhaps only in this sense, Leica matters.
But really, all camera companies matter, because they provide choice, and diminishing choice is seldom if ever good.
In fact, they're worse than irrelevant if they get in the way of taking pictures.. . . But those goodies are irrelevant if you don't need or want them. . .
In fact, they're worse than irrelevant if they get in the way of taking pictures.
Cheers,
R.
Exactly, the issue doesn't necessarily center on the comparative expense account for the cameras' guts, but on the final price. The digital M, which is Leica's top end full frame 35mm camera, cost around the same as Nikon's and Canon's top end full frame 35mm cameras.
Yes, I think we all get it; the DSLRs are jam-packed with goodies. But those goodies are irrelevant if you don't need or want them. In the end, no matter how sophisticated and electronically equipped a DSLR is, it will never be a rangefinder. And if one needs or wants a digital rangefinder, the only current option is the Leica M series, and this uniqueness itself constitutes a notable premium.
The point is that someone paying more than US$6,000 to US$7,000 on a DSLR, or one who sees such pricing reasonable for a high-end camera, is really not in position to then paint Leica owner's as chic-driven show offs enslaved to conspicuous consumption.
Moreover, if someone wanted to showoff their goods in a way that's going to attract the general public, not just other photographers, are they going to hang a rangefinder around their neck or a large DSLR strutting a huge telephoto lens?
One would have to be drenched in immeasurable levels of naiveté to think that a good number of photographers don't, in part, buy large DSLRs to flaunt as some type of a suburban status symbol. In fact, numerically speaking, the number of people who use their DSLRs as jewelry is likely much higher than those similarly using a Leica for no other reason than the limited number of Leica users altogether.
But here's the thing, it's not the camera's fault how it is used, abused, or appropriated. If someone uses a Leica or a large glaringly white L lens to announce his or hers materialistic triumphs (and yes, this happens!), it doesn't suddenly render ALL Leica's or white L lenses as ineffectual decoration.
Yet, it just seems that certain people too dismissively target all Leica's as just the accouterments of the ostentatious, as though the cameras could serve no other purpose. To be sure, for such criticism and negative perception, Leica is partly (largely) to blame, as it does push and profit well from its boutique persona...and many of its limited editions even raise the ire of some of the company's most loyal customers. But again, does this mean that a digital Leica M is just a superfluous luxury item that holds no practical value to an earnest photographer? Of course not!
But as always, it gets a little more complicated. The guy flaunting his Leica or John Holmesian L lens might also use these accessories to photograph, and possibly even photograph well. Fashion and industrial design are not mutually exclusive of functionality, and while this might come as a shock, some people, for example, will buy a certain car because a) it will get them from point A to point B, and b) it looks good.
Yes, Leica's are expensive, and yes, celebrities are drawn to the company's name brand (also its small size I would figure), but the Leica M is ultimately a camera, and for those seeking a digital rangefinder, Leica is the only answer (outside the older Epsons). And as long as Leica is the only company making a full frame digital rangefinder, I would argue that in this sense, and perhaps only in this sense, Leica matters.
But really, all camera companies matter, because they provide choice, and diminishing choice is seldom if ever good.
In fact, they're worse than irrelevant if they get in the way of taking pictures.
Cheers,
R.
Phil really called it right here. Leica is NOT a Ferrari, Lamborghini, or jewel-encrusted tiara that have no practical value.
......
Oh my.
Ferrari's have no practical value?
Some people enjoy driving a high-performance automobile as much as others enjoy making photographs. Just hearing a Ferrari V12 motor at full power is pleasurable to some.
Grytpype-Thynne: You do know, Eccles, that you're an idiot?
Eccles: Yesh, but the world needs idiots!
😀
At the end of the day, a Ferrari etc., gets you from point A to B -no differently than a Leica delivering an image.
Oh my.
Ferrari's have no practical value?
Only in theory though.
Try driving a Ferrari 430 ... without ruining the undercarriage.
So, yes, I'd assert that a Ferrari is of no practical value.
I'll get in first by saying he was an idiot savant...
Ferrari's have no practical value?
Au contraire. Ferraris are extremely efficient in terms of assisting those who drive them in getting laid.
That one attribute instills megatons of practical value in them. 😀
Ferraris matter - but for vastly different reasons from why Leicas matter.
That is a puzzling comment - quite the opposite, in fact. I'm heading out the door with my M4-P and 28/2 Summicron ASPH right now...You sound like a genuine Leica hater.
That is a puzzling comment - quite the opposite, in fact. I'm heading out the door with my M4-P and 28/2 Summicron ASPH right now...
They are still fantastic cameras but for someone in my position, I just couldn't rationalize keeping it