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Brown Vulcanite


neal

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We have a couple of model IIIa's that have brown vulcanite, someone has suggested that it fades due to heavy use but the brown color extends into areas that are not handled. Any ideas?

 

When I showed one of the "brown" Leica from the Fontenelle Collection to Leitz people in Wetzlar some (quite a few..) years ago, they definitely confirmed it was a normal "aging" phenomenon, mainly due - not to sun exposure, but to hands transpiration.

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I'm wondering if there might have been some difference in the raw rubber used to make the vulcanite as both examples that we have date from the mid 1930's, I'm wondering if here was some sort of embargo of either French or Dutch rubber from the southeast asian region. This brown color appears to go clear through the covering.

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Guest Ron (Netherlands)

Did they use rubber? mine, a III from 1934 seems to be fitted with genuine leather, which indeed was colored black but now, with age, has become brown.

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Did they use rubber? mine, a III from 1934 seems to be fitted with genuine leather, which indeed was colored black but now, with age, has become brown.

One of the two Brown IIIa's that we have had all of the covering come off in pieces. I put it back on but it appeared to be the hard rubber vulcanite only brown rather than black. We also have a couple of older cameras which have seen lots of use but they retain their black coloration. The camera pictured above appears at first glance to be leather but it is not

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