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FM2n sold for $ 1011

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nicefor88

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Hi everyone,
I just want to share with you all the following information:
a Nikon FM2n was sold today on ebay uk for a cool $ 1011 (699 british pounds). It is a Year of the Dragon "special edition".
What is your reaction?

The Year of the Dragon is a limited edition of the classic FM2n chrome finish released in 2000 to celebrate the chinese year of the dragon. Only 2000 were built and sold in a presentation kit that included a 50mm f1.4 with matching serial number. The one sold here had the number 1222/2000.
It has nothing different from a standard FMn except the specific serial number and a small oval dragon plate glued to the camera's front left, just under the "FM2" engraving.
 
Collectors............
It is the same with a gold Leica, RB, Rollei 35: without that "special" gold they are worth a lot less.
These camera's are not bought to photograph with, just to be put into a vitrine, safely behind (armoured) glass so nobody can toutch them.

For me a camera is one to take pic's with, good ones.

Peter
 
What Peter says!

I could sell a Limited Edition Colin-Brand Nikon...only one ever designated! Officially licensed and trademarked by the Colin Institute.

Wouldn't mean much, but if someone is willing to pay...
 
How much will these be worth in a few years when 95% of the population forgets what a film camera is?

I can see the value of camera rare because of who used it, or maybe even an early model of a camera that was ground-breaking.

But these "collectible" cameras seem like beanie babies for guys. An item indefensibly over-priced because supply was artifically limited.

10 years from now, our kids won't give a crap about them and they'll be mostly worthless. Sort of a tulip for the early 21st Century.
 
any collectibles sell for insane amounts of money because of what Peter said. I couldn't care less, I use my cameras and only pay to keep them working (CLA and little fixes).
 
To shamelessly paraphrase George Carlin's line (he was talking about cocaine), "This is God's way of telling you you've got too much money"

Larry
 
I remember when that "special edition' Nikon was released. It was a running joke among Nikon users because it was so cheesy with that press on decal.
 
The irony, of course, is that China is (in)famous for mass-producing knock-offs.

There's probably a dozen look-a-likes of this camera around, and a lot of 'collectors' probably couldn't tell the difference.
 
I don't know if the buyer was Asian but in Asia there is considerable signifigance attached to years and numbers.-Dick
 
yes, lucky numbers and the like, but, hey, it's a FM2 after all, won't take better pictures than a regular one as you all know.
Leica indulged in the same marketing frenzy by making that incredible variety of "special editions" celebrating mariages of famous kings and queens or even successful Leica dealers...
Thanks for your reactions,
Serge
 
even if its a collectors item.. i would still use it.. i never believed at those money making schemes.. if its a camera, i will use it.. but i wont be paying that much money for the same kind that is worth a fraction of that.. if i ever get a nikon SP2005 at a reasonable and affordable price.. i will not have second thoughts of using it.. im not a collector.. im a photographer..
 
I've got a black paint Leica M6 'Year of the Dragon' I bought for a decent price for a black paint M6...I use it. It was 'as new' when I bought it, it's just 'Minty' now.:tongue:
 
Prices for FM2n recently in Australia have seen good cla'd ones exceed $450. They would have stopped at $250 a year ago.
 
I remember seeing the "Year of The Dragon" special edition Nikons in stock at the big houses in New York well into 2002. IIRC, the new FM3a had already been announced by the time the special FM2N went on sale. I think most people saw the "special edition" FM2N as a cheap marketing ploy by Nikon to try to move the remainder of the FM2Ns.
 
How ridiculous. I bought mine new almost 9 years ago for around 500$ Canadian...mine's special too! :wink:
 
Let's hope those proud collectors one day bravely remove the baseplate and find a "Made in China" mark inside!
What proof is there this camera isn't a fake from the Land of Fakes?
 
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