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mfg:leica

Company Summary

Leica

Company Website: www.leica-camera.com
Duclos Page: (www.ducloslenses.com/url)
Leica Camera AG is a German company that manufactures cameras, lenses, binoculars, rifle scopes, microscopes and ophthalmic lenses. The company was founded by Ernst Leitz in 1869. The name Leica is derived from the first three letters of his surname (Leitz) and the first two of the word camera: lei-ca. Leica Camera AG is 45% owned by The Blackstone Group which licenses the Leica brand name from the independently owned Leica Microsystems GmbH.


Lens Models

Cine Lenses

See Leitz for Leitz Cine (CW Sonderoptic) Lenses.

Still Lenses

M Series

Leica M Hologon 15mm f/8
Leica M Tri-Elmar ASPH 16-18-21mm f/4
Leica M Super-Elmar ASPH 18mm f/3.8

Leica M Super-Angulon 2.1cm f/4
Leica M Super-Angulon 21mm f/3.4
Leica M Super-Elmar ASPH 21mm f/3.4
Leica M Elmarit 21mm f/2.8
Leica M Elmarit ASPH 21mm f/2.8
Leica M Summilux ASPH 21mm f/1.4

Leica M Elmar ASPH 24mm f/3.8
Leica M Elmarit ASPH 24mm f/2.8
Leica M Summilux ASPH 24mm f/1.4

Leica M Summaron 2.8cm f/5.6
Leica M Elmarit I 28mm f/2.8
Leica M Elmarit II 28mm f/2.8
Leica M Elmarit III 28mm f/2.8
Leica M Elmarit IV 28mm f/2.8
Leica M Elmarit ASPH 28mm f/2.8
Leica M Summicron ASPH 28mm f/2
Leica M Summilux ASPH 28mm f/1.4

Leica M Tri-Elmar ASPH 28-35-50mm f/4
Leica M Summaron 3.5cm f/3.5
Leica M Summaron 3.5cm f/2.8
Leica M Summarit 35mm f/2.5
Leica M Summarit ASPH 35mm f/2.4
Leica M Summicron I 3.5cm f/2
Leica M Summicron II 35mm f/2
Leica M Summicron III 35mm f/2
Leica M Summicron IV 35mm f/2
Leica M Summicron ASPH 35mm f/2
Leica M Summilux I 35mm f/1.4
Leica M Summilux II 35mm f/1.4
Leica M Summilux ASPH I (AA) 35mm f/1.4
Leica M Summilux ASPH II 35mm f/1.4
Leica M Summilux ASPH III (FLE) 35mm f/1.4
Leica M Elmar III 5cm f/3.5

Leica M Elmar 5cm f/2.8
Leica M Elmar 50mm f/2.8
Leica M Summarit 50mm f/2.5
Leica M Summarit 50mm f/2.4
Leica M Elcan 50mm f/2
Leica M Summicron I 5cm f/2
Leica M Summicron II 5cm f/2
Leica M Summicron 50mm f/2
Leica M APO-Summicron ASPH 50mm f/2
Leica M Summarit 5cm f/1.5
Leica M Summilux I 5cm f/1.4
Leica M Summilux II 50mm f/1.4
Leica M Summilux III 50mm f/1.4
Leica M Summilux ASPH 50mm f/1.4
Leica M Noctilux 50mm f/1.2
Leica M Noctilux 50mm f/1
Leica M Noctilux ASPH 50mm f/0.95

Leica M Summarit 75mm f/2.5
Leica M Summarit 75mm f/2.4
Leica M APO-Summicron ASPH 75mm f/2
Leica M Summilux 75mm f/1.4
Leica M Noctilux ASPH 75mm f/1.25

Leica M Elmar 90mm f/4
Leica M Elmar (III) 90mm f/4
Leica M Macro-Elmar 90mm f/4
Leica M Tele-Emarit I 90mm f/2.8
Leica M Tele-Emarit II 90mm f/2.8
Leica M Elmarit 9cm f/2.8
Leica M Elmarit 90mm f/2.8
Leica M Summarit 90mm f/2.5
Leica M Summarit 90mm f/2.4
Leica M Summicron I 9cm f/2
Leica M Summicron II 9cm f/2
Leica M Summicron III 90mm f/2
Leica M APO-Summicron ASPH 90mm f/2

Leica M Hektor 13.5cm f/4.5
Leica M Tele-Elmar 135mm f/4
Leica M Elmar 135mm f/4
Leica M APO-Telyt 135mm f/3.4
Leica M Elmarit I 135mm f/2.8
Leica M Elmarit II 135mm f/2.8
Leica M Elmarit III 135mm f/2.8

R Series Primes

Leica R Super-Elmar 15mm f/3.5
Leica R Super-Elmarit ASPH 15mm f/2.8
Leica R Fisheye-Elmarit 16mm f/2.8

Leica R Elmarit Ver I 19mm f/2.8
Leica R Elmarit Ver II 19mm f/2.8

Leica R Super-Angulon 21mm f/4
Leica R Super-Angulon 21mm f/3.4

Leica R Elmarit 24mm f/2.8

Leica R PC-Super-Angulon 28mm f/2.8
Leica R Elmarit Ver I 28mm f/2.8
Leica R Elmarit Ver II 28mm f/2.8

Leica R PA-Curtagon 35mm f/4
Leica R Elmarit Ver I 35mm f/2.8
Leica R Elmarit Ver II 35mm f/2.8
Leica R Elmarit Ver III 35mm f/2.8
Leica R Elmarit Ver IV 35mm f/2.8
Leica R Summicron Ver I 35mm f/2
Leica R Summicron Ver II 35mm f/2
Leica R Summilux 35mm f/1.4

Leica R Summicron Ver I 50mm f/2
Leica R Summicron Ver II 50mm f/2
Leica R Summilux Ver I 50mm f/1.4
Leica R Summilux Ver II 50mm f/1.4
Leica R Summilux Ver III 50mm f/1.4

Leica R Macro-Elmarit Ver I 60mm f/2.8
Leica R Macro-Elmarit Ver II 60mm f/2.8

Leica R Elcan Code C-341 75mm f/2

Leica R Summilux 80mm f/1.4

Leica R Elmarit Ver I 90mm f/2.8
Leica R Elmarit Ver II 90mm f/2.8
Leica R Summicron Ver I 90mm f/2
Leica R Summicron Ver II 90mm f/2
Leica R APO-Summicron ASPH 90mm f/2
Leica R Elcan 90mm f/1

Leica R Macro-Elmar (bellows) 100mm f/4
Leica R Macro-Elmar (helical) 100mm f/4
Leica R APO-Macro-Elmarit 100mm f/2.8

Leica R Elmarit Ver I 135mm f/2.8
Leica R Elmarit Ver II 135mm f/2.8

Leica R Elmar 180mm f/4
Leica R Elmarit Ver I 180mm f/2.8
Leica R Elmarit Ver II 180mm f/2.8
Leica R APO-Telyt 180mm f.3.4
Leica R APO-Elmarit Ver I 180mm f/2.8
Leica R APO-Elmarit Ver II 180mm f/2.8
Leica R APO-Summicron 180mm f/2
Leica R Elcan Code C-303 180mm f/3.4

Leica R Telyt Ver I 250mm f/4
Leica R Telyt Ver II 250mm f/4

Leica R Telyt-V 280mm f/4.8
Leica R APO-Telyt 280mm f/4
Leica R APO-Telyt Module 280mm f/2.8
Leica R APO-Telyt 280mm f/2.8

Leica R Telyt 350mm f/4.8

Leica R Telyt 400mm f/6.8
Leica R Telyt 400mm f/5.6
Leica R APO-Telyt Module 400mm f/4
Leica R APO-Telyt 400mm f/2.8
Leica R APO-Telyt Module 400mm f/2.8

Leica R Elcan Code C-329 450mm f/5.6

Leica R MR-Telyt 500mm f/8
Leica R APO-Telyt Module 500mm f/4

Leica R Telyt 560mm f/6.8
Leica R Telyt 560mm f/5.6
Leica R APO-Telyt Module 560mm f/5.6

Leica R Telyt-S 800mm f/6.3
Leica R APO-Telyt Module 800mm f/5.6

R Series Zooms

Key Figures

(List important figures that played a significant role within the company, past and present.)


History

Founded: 1849 — Wetzlar, German Confederation (modern day Germany)

Currently: Leica Camera AG

Leica Camera AG is a high-end camera and optical company founded in the German city of Wetzlar in 1849 as the Optisches Institut (Optical Institute) by Carl Kellner who had a well-earned reputation for producing extremely high quality microscopes. Kellner passed away shortly after founding the company and his former apprentice Friedrich Belthle had been running things for nearly a decade when a mechanically inclined young man named Ernst Leitz joined the Optisches Institut in 1864.

Leitz, who had left school at 15 years old, had spent the past six years in Switzerland working for watch companies where he had acquired and refined an impressive set of technical, logistics, and management skills. These skills went on to make such a profound impact at the company that Belthle made Leitz a partner just one short year later. In 1867, the company produced its one thousandth microscope, a milestone that was unfortunately closely followed by two tragedies: a marked drop in sales due to a failure to innovate and the death of Friedrich Belthle from illness.

After Belthle’s passing, Leitz assumed control of the company and renamed it the Ernst Leitz Optische Werke. Business boomed in the coming decades and by 1910, the company was known worldwide, standardized the eight hour work day, and provided health insurance for all one thousand or so of its employees who were now producing over 9,000 microscopes per year. This was around the same time that a brilliant engineer named Oskar Barnack came to work at Ernst Leitz Optische.

An avid photographer, Barnack longed for a lightweight, reliable alternative to the heavy, bulky cameras available at the time. He began working on developing a new camera that he could easily take with him on his travels. In 1913, Barnack finished his first draft: the Ur-Leica (“Ur” being a German prefix meaning “original” and “Leica” being a portmanteau of “Leitz” and “camera”) featuring a custom collapsible lens which would become the basis for the now legendary Leica Elmar range. The prototype was small enough to fit in one’s pocket and utilized Thomas Edison’s cinematic 35mm film, a miniature format that anyone was free to manufacture after its patent was invalidated just a decade prior. The Ur-Leica was revolutionary in both design and function but any plans of development or production were shelved as Europe erupted in the First World War the following year.

Like most of its peers, Ernst Leitz Optische Werke struggled to resume operations as a freshly defeated Germany entered a period of deep economic recession. Leitz passed away in 1920 and left the company to his son, Ernst Leitz II, who took the company public and rechristened it Ernst Leitz GmbH. A small batch of 31 “Leica A” models were produced in 1923 for testing and evaluation by trusted photographers. Two short years later, the company decided to take a big gamble and introduced the Leica (later called the Leica I) to the public at the 1925 Leipzig Spring Fair which was surprisingly met with instantaneous success. In 1930, the Leica I’s fixed 50mm f/3.5 lens was replaced by a 39mm thread mount (which quickly became known as LTM or Leica Thread Mount) for interchangeable lenses, opening up a whole new world of possibilities. A compact rangefinder assembly was soon added to aid focusing and the Leica II was born followed by the Leica III, which allowed for slower shutter speeds, a year later in 1933.

Meanwhile, in 1933, Germany had appointed a new chancellor: Adolf Hitler. Having been warned of Hitler’s political ideologies, Ernst Leitz II quickly started what would later be known as the “Leica Freedom Train”: strategic assignments of Jewish employees, associates, and friends to the company’s satellite offices abroad. The outward flow of Jewish refugees reached its peak in 1938 in reaction to Nazi violence and continued until Hitler closed Germany’s borders and started World War II by invading Poland. As the war progressed, Leitz was called on to produce cameras and other optical instruments for the Wehrmacht. Many company representatives including executive Alfred Turk and Ernst Leitz II’s own daughter Elsie were caught and imprisoned for helping Jews escape Nazi Germany in the years leading up to the Second World War. The full extent of the company’s secret anti-Nazi activities was not discovered by historians until many years later.

The Leitz factory in Wetzlar was spared during the war and so they were able to immediately resume developing variants of the Leica II and III such as the Leica IIf until 1954 when the groundbreaking Leica M3 was released. The M3 represented a significant technological leap forward with its improved rangefinder assembly, new “M mount” bayonet lens mount, and robust shutter and was the beginning of the Leica M series of rangefinders which is still in production today. In 1964, the company expanded into 35mm SLRs with the Leicaflex and entered into a partnership with Minolta in 1972 which produced classics such as the Leica CL, Leica R3, and Leica R4.

In 1986, Ernst Leitz GmbH decided to take advantage of its cameras’ reputation and renamed itself Leica GmbH. Nearly ten years later, Leica began supplying lenses to Panasonic for its digital cameras, an arrangement that carries on to this day. Leica’s camera division was soon spun off into its own company called Leica Camera AG which immediately acquired fellow Wetzlar-based company Minox GmbH, manufacturer of the famous Minox spy camera. However, controlling interest was wrestled back by a Minox executive and the company severed all ties with Leica in 2005. The following year, Leica acquired a 51% stake in the Zurich-based large format camera company Sinar but it didn’t completely take over the Swiss firm until 2018. Leica currently offers a wide range of products including both film and digital rangefinders, medium format DSLRs, instant cameras, and mirrorless digital cameras.


Media


External Links

mfg/leica [.txt] · Last modified: 2024-07-10 / 10:22:12 am PDT by JR