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Followed by Leica Luxur and Leica Compur (a total of 60,586 of the Leica I, Luxur, and Compur models were made). Interchangeable lenses for these were introduced in 1930. Leica Standard: 1932. The first Leica camera was designed with a film-to-lens flange distance of 28.8 millimeters. Leica II: 1932. The first Leica camera with a rangefinder.
The Leica SL (Typ 601) is a full-frame mirrorless interchangeable-lens camera announced by Leica Camera AG on 20 October 2015. The SL was promoted as a camera system for professional applications. Beside the Leica S-System, the Leica SL-System was the 2nd professional camera system in the company's product portfolio. [2]
The Leica M10 is a full-frame digital rangefinder camera in Leica Camera AG's rangefinder M series. [3] It accepts Leica M-mount lenses. The camera model was introduced on 19 January 2017. It is a successor to the Leica M9; and has similarities to and differences from the Leica M (Typ 240), Leica M (Typ 262), and Leica M Monochrom.
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Leica Camera AG: Intro price: $21,950 [1] Lens; Lens mount: ... The Leica S is a digital camera. References ...
Leica M10-P Digital Rangefinder 2018 [52] External (Leica Visoflex electronic accessory viewfinder) [53] Leica S: Medium Format 2012 [54] Built-in GPS [55] Leica SL (Typ 601) Mirrorless Full-Frame 2015 [56] Built-in GPS [57] Leica TL2: MILC: 2017 [58] External (Leica Visoflex electronic accessory viewfinder) [59] Leica V-Lux 20 Compact 2010 [60 ...
The Leica minilux is the first in a series of four luxury titanium-clad point and shoot cameras that were produced by Leica Camera starting from 1995; it is equipped with a high-quality lens and body to compete with similar premium compact cameras produced during the Japanese bubble-economy era, including the Contax T line, Konica Hexar, Nikon 28Ti/35Ti, Minolta TC-1, Ricoh GR series, and ...
The M2 was followed by the still simpler Leica M1 and then the Leica M4, which used a similar rangefinder design but re-introduced the M3 style frame counter and added a faster loading system and a canted rewind lever. On the present-day used market the M2, originally intended to be more "affordable", sells at prices only slightly lower than ...
Exact Soviet Leica II copy the FED 1 or Fedka camera c. 1934 by Stephen Rothery; Soviet development of Leica II concept the FED 2 c. 1955 by Stephen Rothery; FED cameras Price Guide completed auction prices; Zorki Survival Site by Jay Javier; USSRPhoto.com Wiki catalog entries for the FED-1 cameras. Use left navigation to see other FED models