I have shot with SLR cameras all my life. Then, one day I had this idea to start a series on shots of coffee cups in Milan bars - drinking coffee in Italy is such a ritual, and bars are always full of interesting subjects... When I showed the photos to my friendly salesman in a photography shop, he said : why don't you use a Leica?, you will be able to shoot at slower speeds... But I thought Leicas and Leica lenses were overpriced snobbery... I always liked Zeiss glass, and had beautiful ZF lenses for my Nikons FM3A... So I started cautiously, by buying a Bessa R3A and Zeiss C Sonnar 50/1.5 lens. Then I added an Elmarit 90. When started using this camera, the first reaction was disbelief, because the C Sonnar photos were just out of this world. I have never seen anything comparable before... but there were some problems with the focus shift. When I tried the Elmarit 90, the photos looked like coke bottle lens results - AHA, I thought, The Zeiss superiority is obvious! A pity, that after some time I discovered, my Bessa was misaligned right out of the factory... After few more weks, the paint wore off on the rewind crank, and even with the loving care of a nice Luigi case, the shutter was quite loud. What was also quite annoying, was the tendency of the camera to tilt backwards when it was hanging from my neck, with the lens looking up to the sky, ready to collect dust and raindrops. The worst thing of all though, has been the difficulty to see the 50mm framellines ( I wear glasses). I decided to try something better, I bought a Zeiss Ikon. The quality jump has been quite big - huge VF, more silent shutter, better handling, much better (more accurate) focusing due to the longer base, better vision with bigger lenses, much better finish. This camera has been a pleasure to use. I added some Zeiss rf lenses, and shot with it happily for some time. I added then a Bessa R4A for the wide angles, and a Minolta CLE for travel. However slowly, slowly I noticed I was gravitating towards shooting mainly with a 50mm lens, and the Zeiss Ikon 50mm frame is somewhat smallish, so one day I bought a second hand 0.85x M7. I have modified the camera, removing the 75mm frameline ( I think the 50/75mm frame coupling is the worst Leica invention ever). I started using my Leica cursing its awkward film loading scheme, bothered by its weight and by the need to protect the lens from pointing into the sun to avoid burning the shutter. I thought it was going to be my camera for shooting in interiors - silent and with long base, which was good for fast 50mm lenses. Well, to make the long story short, with time the Leica grew on me. It is technically inferior to Zeiss Ikon, but I find myself invariably reaching out for a Leica first, when I have to go out. It just feels right, it gives you the impresion of solidity and reliability. The rf is easy to focus and contrasty (in the meantime I had to align my ZI too), the shutter is incredibly silent, the weight can actually be an asset when using slow speeds. With time, Leica has become second nature. I added an 0.58x M7 and an M4, and the sensation is the same. As to the lenses, I would say that it really depends on what you like and what you need. I have tried many lenses from CV, Zeiss, Leica and Canon. There are gems in each line. However, if I had to keep only one lens, I would probably opt for the 50/2 DR/Rigid Summicron - I am exclusively a B&W shooter, and I find that the rendering of these old style, high resolution, low contrast lenses is insuperable. If you want to check wheather Leica has any appeal to you, you should try to borrow a Leica with this lens for a few days and shoot some rolls of Tri X or HP5+ with it to see for yourself. After all, if photography is your main passion in life, an M3 with the DR Summicron can be found in good conditions for about 1000 EUR, and it will last you decades - not a big difference in price relative to a Bessa R3A with a CV lens. Check the story of this guy: Gary Stochl - I think he has been shooting with this kind of combo for the last 40 years...