Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/08/17
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]My wife, daughter, and I recently returned from a vacation in Europe. I = took two Leica bodies, an M3 and M2, to record scenery and take the = obligatory family photos. =20 Here are some photographic observations from my trip. We visited = several places where I expected people to be vigorously taking pictures: = Chamonix and Mont Blanc, France, Lugano, Switzerland, Venice, Italy, = and Athens, Greece. The Americans appear to have completely abandoned serious photography. I = saw them use point and shoots and video cameras held in one hand, often = while they were jumping around or walking or eating. The Japanese were a bit more serious. Almost all members of Japanese = tour groups had cameras. Most carried point and shoots, but some of the = gentleman had huge camera bags full of fancy equipment. One fellow in = Venice had twin F5 Nikons. I guess he wanted to be sure not to miss = anything important. The Europeans were more interesting. Some of the older German gents = were using elegant Retinas, Voitlanders, and other chrome rangefinders = from the 1950s. Some of the eastern Europeans had Practikas and other = Eastern block cameras. On the Adriatic ferry boat, there was a large = Polish student group, and some of the kids took pictures of each other = with Zorkis. I did not see any Leica cameras whatsoever, anywhere. I did not see any Contax cameras anywhere. =20 In Venice, I met a store keeper with a Hasselblad, but that was the only = medium-format camera I saw in a month of visiting popular tourist areas. As for film, it looks like Fuji print film now outsells Kodak in Europe. = The most common E-6 film was Fujichrome. I did not see any Kodachrome = for sale anywhere. What's wrong Kodak, have you lost the ability to = market effectively? In Switzerland, Fuji film was about the same cost = as in the U.S., a pleasant surprise considering the high price of = everything else in Switzerland. I bought two PX 625 mercury batteries = in Lugano. I was pleased to see that many European camera stores still = stock black and white film. Here in the U.S., it is harder and harder = to find black and white emulsions.=20 Sad to say, serious photography seems to be a dying hobby. Andrew Morang Vicksburg, Mississippi USA