Saturday, 2 February 2013

Leica Digital Camera

Leica Digital Camera Details
The first Leica prototypes were built by Oskar Barnack at Ernst Leitz Optische Werke, Wetzlar, in 1913. Intended as a compact camera for landscape photography, particularly during mountain trips, the Leica was the first practical 35 mm camera that used standard cinema 35 mm film. The Leica transports the film horizontally, extending the frame size to 24×36 mm, with a 2:3 aspect ratio, instead of the 18×24 mm that cinema cameras use, as they transport the film vertically.
The Leica went through several iterations, and in 1923 Barnack convinced his boss, Ernst Leitz II, to make a pre-production series of 31 cameras for the factory and outside photographers to test. Though the prototypes received a mixed reception, Ernst Leitz decided in 1924 to produce the camera. It was an immediate success when introduced at the 1925 Leipzig Spring Fair as the Leica I (for Leitz camera). The focal plane shutter had a range from 1/20 to 1/500 second, in addition to a Z for Zeit (time) position.
Barnack conceived the Leica as a small camera that produced a small negative. To make big photos by enlargement, (the "small negative, large picture" concept) required that the camera have high quality lenses that could create sharp negatives. Barnack tried a Zeiss Tessar on his early protoype camera, but because the Tessar was designed for the 18x24mm cine format, it inadequately covered the Leica's 24x36mm negative
Leica Digital Camera
Leica Digital Camera
Leica Digital Camera
Leica Digital Camera
Leica Digital Camera
Leica Digital Camera
Leica Digital Camera
Leica Digital Camera
Leica Digital Camera
Leica Digital Camera
Leica Digital Camera
Leica Digital Camera
Leica Digital Camera
Leica Digital Camera
Leica Digital Camera
Leica Digital Camera
Leica Digital Camera
Leica Digital Camera
Leica Digital Camera
Leica Digital Camera
                    

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