Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Leica copies originate from the Leica camera that was launched by Ernst Leitz, Wetzlar in 1925, using the Leica 39mm screw mount of 26 threads per inch (25.4 mm), and the standard 35mm film. The design was carried out by Oskar Barnack , beginning in 1913 by building a camera for 24×36 mm negatives that by now is called the Ur-Leica, or ...
Leica TL2 – The Leica TL2 is the successor of the Leica TL. Leica CL – The camera was introduced November 21, 2017. Non-Leica (Sigma and Panasonic) Sigma and Panasonic joined forces with Leica to form the L-mount Alliance on 25 September 2018 and license the L-mount system for their own lines of lenses and cameras. [16]
Leica Camera AG (/ ˈ l aɪ k ə /) is a German company that manufactures cameras, optical lenses, photographic lenses, binoculars, and rifle scopes.The company was founded by Ernst Leitz in 1869 (Ernst Leitz Wetzlar), in Wetzlar, Germany.
FED company history (Rus) Rangefinder cameras of the Soviet era; Faraway, yet so close "Are Leica LTM lenses really compatible with Soviet LTM bodies?" Industar 26 and 61 Relubing Archived 2011-10-21 at the Wayback Machine; rus-camera Archived 2011-09-28 at the Wayback Machine; Exact Soviet Leica II copy the FED 1 or Fedka camera c. 1934 by ...
Leica Society International (formerly LHSA - The International Leica Society, and formerly Leica Historical Society of America) [1] is an independent, nonprofit membership organization dedicated to everything regarding the Leica camera. It changed its name in 2023 to Leica Society International.
A painting by British artist George Stubbs is expected to sell for up to £2 million ($2.5 million) in London next week, as it comes to auction for the first time in more than 50 years.. The 18th ...
One of two books that Lee had published (the other, Go Set a Watchman, hit stores last July), To Kill a Mockingbird both broke readers' hearts and filled them, all while making record-breaking ...
Zorki cameras have their roots in the FED line of Leica copies. In 1948, when the FED factory was falling behind its production goals, the KMZ factory in Krasnogorsk, Russia was geared up to produce FED cameras. By 1949, KMZ had made some design changes and started manufacturing the FED-Zorki, which later became known as the Zorki 1.