Leitz
SUPERB! 1936 Black Leitz Leica III with Nickel Elmar lens, CLA'd, Freshly Serviced!
Cleaned, Lubricated & Adjusted. Ready for immediate use!
There are times when camera collecting is incredibly difficult. It comes as moments when you’re asked simple questions like “What’s the best camera…?” or “Which is the most significant camera ever?” The brain starts working, the heart beats nicely and the mouth moves but if an answer appears at all… it’s a long and complicated one, full of design details, historical moments and personal rationalizations.
Fortunately answers come quicker when we are asked to feel more and think less…. Matters of the heart are easier to answer and to agree on. The eye and the heart have a directness and honesty that the brain lacks as it struggles to retain, comprehend and balance all the many details.
So here’s a simple question for the heart. What is the most enjoyable camera of the 20th century…? I don’t know about you, but I see the answer almost immediately. I can also feel it between my hands. And it’s a surprising answer because it runs counter to my technology oriented brain. What I see is not the most expensive, the rarest or even the most sophisticated. That evidently doesn’t impress my heart… which is why the heart and the mind are such a good match. They need each other for balance. The brain tells us what we think we need and the heart tells us what we want.
The most enjoyable camera ever….? I thought it would be a Pentax Spotmatic but it’s not. The winner is a screw mount Leica. It’s honest, it’s significant and above all it’s great fun to be with. The Leica is like the perfect partner that some of us search our entire lives for. It has that unique mix of something for the heart, something for the eye and something for the head. It’s that perplexing mix that insures we never tire of being close. And when you cradle it in your hands, you’re not simply picking up a camera… it’s more like being reunited with an old friend. A friend with rich sparkling stories of adventure and history, life and death, valor and treachery, lives and passion… And like a faithful friend it will go on and on recording our adventures, our children’s adventures and possibly be still there for our grand children to enjoy and to remind them of our life, excursions and adventures.
This camera’s own life is long and colorful. I can’t tell you the stories of where it’s been but I can tell you this camera started its long journey of many roads and many years in 1936. It was built in a time and a place when the world looked very different than it does today. Eighty-two years it still works as smoothly as the day it left the factory.
This Leica III has just been carefully cleaned, lubricated and adjusted to help insure that it will continue working for many years to come. This particular camera works very smoothly and lends credence to the idea that the more a Leica is used, the smoother it works. The shutter curtains run smoothly and are completely light tight. The coupled rangefinder image is very easy to see and focusing works smoothly & accurately. The view finder is clean and bright. The camera winds very smoothly and all shutter speeds, 1 sec. thru 1/500th are appropriate.
It comes complete and ready to use with the lens shown, a Leitz film take up spool and a used brown leather camera case. Just load it with your favorite film and you’re good to go.
Included is in an early 3.5/50mm Nickel Elmar lens (serial number 278260) in the very desirable nickel finish. This is the correct lens for this early prewar Leica camera because the nickel finish perfectly matches the nickel plated knobs and controls of this camera. (Later Elmar lenses are chrome plated, which looks colder and does not have the same warm glow that nickel does.)
The 3,5/50mm Elmar lens is the classic choice for Leica screw mount cameras and famed for its very convenient size and the lovely rendering it produces in photos. It works quite well on any Leica screw mount camera regardless of vintage.
Cosmetically the lens shows signs of use of course but most collectors will agree it certainly looks lovely on this vintage Leica. The glass is very clean and clear however there are some inevitable light scratches on the front lens element but these are difficult to see with the naked eye. There are no separated elements, fungus, or crystallization. The focus and aperture settings move smoothly and it’s capable of producing lovely photos with modern color and B&W films. (Please feel free to look at the test photos taken with this lens.)
All in all this is a wonderful collectable Leica. The perfect company on your own search for that perfect picture, that perfect moment, when you discover that perfection isn’t about being perfect… it’s about being comfortable about yourself, your choices and following your heart.