I discovered it a short time ago and it was a stroke of lightning. I am trying to study his technique but no one has any news about it. Even of vivian maier we know all used cameras. Of levinstein it is only known that he was a genius.Unfortunately I can't answer your question either. But I am a big fan of Levinstein's work and think he is very underrated.
If you like his work, I'd highly recommend picking up the monograph published by Steidl while it's still in print.
https://steidl.de/Books/Leon-Levinstein-0024304044.html
Good question, which I regrettably can't answer, but a large number of his photographs appear to be taken from a relatively low angle, lower than eye-level which would make me guess a TLR of some sort - at least during some period of his career.
I was also at a tlr but in this photo his shadow Curled up seems that is aiming in a 35mm viewfinderI like this guess. It’s also interesting that his crops are always determined by the content of the image rather than by the film gate. Every one of them is a different aspect ratio. Maybe the neutrality of the square format lends itself to that kind of choice. Here’s a good selection—
https://www.icp.org/browse/archive/constituents/leon-levinstein?all/all/all/all/2
I was also at a tlr but in this photo his shadow Curled up seems that is aiming in a 35mm viewfinder
https://www.icp.org/browse/archive/objects/woman-sunbathing-coney-island-brooklyn
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