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6 Leica cameras made for the Swedish military in the 1950s are up for auction

Swedish auction house Auctionet, has listed a half dozen Leica cameras for auction later this week.

Four of the listed cameras are Leica IIIf rangefinders. Leica produced the camera from 1950 to 1957. The other two are Leica IIIg rangefinder cameras, which Leica began making in 1956. The IIIg was the last screw mount Leica camera, and production ended in 1960. Nearly all the approximately 40,000 Leica IIIg were made with a chrome finish. However, the 125 units produced for the Swedish military were finished in black and include engraved Swedish crowns.

Leica IIIf with Elmar 3.5/5cm lens

The six listings are quite similar looking on the surface. However, there are some minor differences that may affect the camera’s values.

Five of the six Leica cameras built for the Swedish military look set to sell for significant sums. It will be interesting to see if any of them reach the $50,000 mark before the auctions end on May 7. For more information, visit Auctionet.

Leica IIIg with three engraved Swedish crowns on the rear top plate

These aren’t the first expensive Leica cameras to hit auction lately. Last month, we wrote about a rare Leica 16mm prototype that could fetch over $3M at the 40th Leitz Photographica Auction later this year. Last year’s 39th edition of the famous auction featured numerous Leica cameras with starting prices in the six figures. There’s no doubt that Leica, a brand that is still very much alive in the digital age, produced many film cameras and lenses that people continue to desire. Although perhaps as investments rather than photographic tools.

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This article comes from DP Review and can be read on the original site.

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