Hmm I wouldnt have done that for a snotty little Leica. An ALPA, Hasselblad or Linhof 6X9 outfit though is another matter.....
Would you have me say anything else? More power to you on those studies. Hunker down and study; this is your time. You want to be a scared broke cranky old man some day? It happens so easy. GL
Since then i have started university to study Engineering and last month sold pretty much all of my equipment and bought a Leica M6 + Voigtlander 35mm 1.4.
Shooting some ilford FP4 i found in a bulk loader in the darkroom at the minute, labelled as 1976 so i shot it at 50 and seems pretty great to me! example below
View attachment 151429
I'm just overjoyed to see that someone under fifty and not working in the teeth-straightening industry has bought and is using a real Leica film camera. I'm sure that the OP is mature enough to not be upset by a few arrogant, presumptive and predictable comments about his finances.
Enjoy that wonderful camera, make great photographs with it and continue to share your experiences with us here.
Hopefully he's smart enough to spot all varieties of monkey business.I'm sure that the OP is mature enough to not be upset by a few arrogant, presumptive and predictable comments about his finances.
No kidding! I wish I was as smart as him and sold everything to get a Leica instead of buying the junk I had at that time.
On the other hand my first camera, a Chinon CX, showed almost no discernible difference in quality to the ones that followed, Olympus, Nikon, Canon, Leica. The problem was in my head, not in the camera. Therapy is expensive, and camera therapy is no exception.+1 for Franks advice.
Countless rangefinders that were not expensive, but in sum they cost me me almost as a Leica M6 that brought me peace (Minolta hi matic, Yashica lynx, XA, XA2, RC35, Lomo, Zorki, Fed, QL28, Agfa, Mju ... ... ...).
On the other hand my first camera, a Chinon CX, showed almost no discernible difference in quality to the ones that followed, Olympus, Nikon, Canon, Leica. The problem was in my head, not in the camera. Therapy is expensive, and camera therapy is no exception.
So long as the cost of a camera doesn't eat into your film budget, buy whatever makes you feel good. The problem is a lot of photographers think they need Camera X to take a picture, which is clearly nonsense. Daido Moriyama is one of the most prolific producers of photographic books working today, and he used whatever compact point and shoot his friends gave him. His budget was 100% film and print based.True, my first range finder was Minolta HI matic F. Zuiko lens was excellent, and at that time I did not cared that it is fully automatic, without any control. But later I wanted to change f stop, then I needed more control, then I wanted more user friendly interface.
It is not only about picture quality - what I find great in Leica is that you have exactlly all you need - no more and no less (nice feel and therapy included).
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