IIIF provides researchers rich metadata and media viewing options for comparison of works across cultural heritage collections. Visit the IIIF page to learn more. The first experimental Leica cameras ...
Rudi Spiller, CEO of Germany's Leica Camera AG, has a square jaw and stands as though rooted to the floor. His hair is closely cropped, and behind his rimless glasses his eyes are keen. In opening ...
Leica, the venerable camera and optics manufacturer, marks 100 years in the business of making photographic equipment, with the Lilliput, or Ur-Leica, the company’s first camera created in 2014. Leica ...
The Leica M10-P "ASC 100 Edition" was revealed today with an eye for unique users and end-products. This is the sort of camera you get if you're aiming to make something nobody's ever made before – ...
The Leica M10-P ASC 100 Edition is a classy looking black and gold camera designed with cinematographers in mind. Leica announced the special edition camera this morning as a way to celebrate the ...
Leica, the iconic German maker of high-end photographic equipment, will officially inaugurate its new headquarters in Wetzlar tomorrow, marking a return home to the site where it began making cameras ...
In 1849 Carl Kellner founded the Wetzlar Optical Institute in Germany, working on the development of lenses and microscopes; he died six years later, at the age of only 29. In 1864, precision mechanic ...
In 1914 optical engineer Oskar Barnack was working for Ernst Leitz when he designed the very first Leica, the Leitz Camera, or so-called Ur-Leica. The small handheld camera, one of the first to use ...
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works. Got £350,000 to £450,000 ($456,400 to $86,800) to spare and are a massive Leica fan? You're in ...
New York, the world’s first street photo from a compact camera, by Ernst Leitz II in 1914. The Hindenburg, by Dr Paul Wolff, at the mast at the Rhein Main airport in 1936. The VJ day photo of a ...
In 1849 Carl Kellner founded the Wetzlar Optical Institute in Germany, working on the development of lenses and microscopes; he died six years later, at the age of only 29. In 1864, precision mechanic ...