This Summilux-M 35mm F1,4 ASPHERICAL Lens Serial Number is: 346073 (LM) This 1st versions produced 1990 circa (estimated only 2000 were produced). Objects Summilux 50mm / f 1.4 Titanium Edition (Pre-ASPH), S / N 3675659ġ1. Sold with all original certificates warranty card, instruction booklet, brochure, sold with Leica original lens hood 12587, Leica leather pouch, and Leica original box with matching numbers. Objects Leica Elmarit 21mm / f 2.8 for film camerasġ0. Lens APO-TELYT-M 135mm / f 3.4, S / N 3722933ĩ. This LEICA SUMMILUX 35mm f/1.4 was the world's fastest ultra-speed wide-angle lens at its introduction in 1960. Digital Camera Leica (color – white), S / N 3111065ĥ. Digital Camera Leica (color – black), S / N 3104330Ĥ. After breaking all the windows, they stole part of the technique, which was in the store. Because of this orderly behavior, it it trivial to figure out when your lens was made. Rare Serial Number & Engraving, Leica M3 SS Rangefinder Camera w/ 5cm f2. Leica made lens number 1,000,000, a 50mm f/1.5 Summarit, on 24 October 1952, at which time they already had onver 100 years of experiance. Rare Leica M Monochrom Ralph Gibson Edition Camera w/ 35mm f1.4 Summilux Lens.
Serial numbers as low as 50,000 are still floating around.
“Today, July 9 at 3:00 am, two masked men in scrap metal shutters kicked the glass door with a sledgehammer and broke into the shop Leica on Leninsky Prospekt. As serial numbers should be, they gave each lens its own serial number, and counted up. Serial numbers are after the jump if you ever spot these in the wild.
Interestingly, they left a $32,000 Leica S2 on the shelf and, not surprisingly, focused mainly on lenses and the familiar standard M9s. In what could amount to a very hefty haul, Moscow thieves took a sledge to metal security shutters and then a glass case to grab twenty items including a Leica Pro Set with three lenses.