"Typ 127"--and I thought it was going to shoot 127 film. Sorry, not retro enough.
I like how they've managed to design out the pentaprism "hump"; I guess it comes with a kit zoom, 24-70 or something? But I can't see that info anywhere.
On the off-chance you don't know, the Leica M is a rangefinder camera. It has no pentaprism and zoom lenses don't work with them because linking a zooming viewfinder to a lens would be very difficult, if even possible.
It's just an MP with less stuff.
and a $200 smaller price tag.
They should have called it the M2-2014.
What a pathetic and transparent money grab. There are enough old film M's around to satisfy the needs of real photographers for sometime to come.....
real photographers?
What a pathetic and transparent money grab. There are enough old film M's around to satisfy the needs of real photographers for sometime to come. This is a princess camera to be coddled and displayed on a shelf somewhere so people can oh and ah over it. Nothing more than the equivalent of a status car parked in the driveway to insure your neighbours see it.
What a pathetic and transparent money grab. There are enough old film M's around to satisfy the needs of real photographers for sometime to come. This is a princess camera to be coddled and displayed on a shelf somewhere so people can oh and ah over it. Nothing more than the equivalent of a status car parked in the driveway to insure your neighbours see it.
What a pathetic and transparent money grab. There are enough old film M's around
Moderators, please merge these threads...
(there was a url link here which no longer exists)
That was a lame attempt to be funny.
Sales of used cameras doesn't exactly keep them in business, since they aren't the ones selling them.
Selling parts probably isn't a good income stream either since it might be 50+ years before many of the cameras need any.
I agree that many of these may simply end up on collector's shelves, but a new film camera, especially one that uses 35mm is a rare thing these days.
If Leica wanted to be practical, they could drop film cameras altogether but they've chosen not to do that. If anything, it would benefit the collectors if they did.
I think they deserve some credit keeping on with film cameras even though not many practitioners will be in a position to buy one new.
What a pathetic and transparent money grab. There are enough old film M's around to satisfy the needs of real photographers for sometime to come. This is a princess camera to be coddled and displayed on a shelf somewhere so people can oh and ah over it. Nothing more than the equivalent of a status car parked in the driveway to insure your neighbours see it.
What a pathetic and transparent money grab. There are enough old film M's around to satisfy the needs of real photographers for sometime to come.
So, the real photographers whisper in your head - Leica are pathetic - its a money grab...
Its no wonder what kind of real photographers do not have respect for one of the most legendary camera brands in the world.
...
One for the collectors. I suspect that most shooters who buy a new film Leica would prefer an MP, with a light meter, for about the same price.
(This is no reflection on those who prefer the older Ms without light meters. There are many excellent reasons to love those classics. I just don't see them applying to the new M-A).
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