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How much have you spent?


IkarusJohn

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This is a bit of a shocker.

 

Add up your entire Leica gear (including non-Leica M lenses and any R and other equipment etc), let's say at cost, and then calculate what proportion of your income this represents (take last year's taxable income, if it helps).

 

Don't need to know what your gear costs, don't need to know what you earn - this issue is, what does your camera kit represent as a proportion of your last year's earnings (before tax, but after depreciation and amortisation). It's the simplest way to do it, and it is indicative, if not accurate.

 

It looks like I have accumulated what amounts to gear costing the equivalent of 2 months of last year's gross income :eek:

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i'm a noob.

 

i only got my secondhand M8.1 (M8u) a few weeks ago. with the Voigtlander 35mm f1.4 lens and accessories i've bought thus far....it adds up to less than 1 week gross income. Ask me again in a year and i'm guessing this proportion will change...unfortunately! :(

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Hi John,

 

You can always find inaccuracies, misleading conclusions and all you like. The point is, older lenses at cost will be worth a bit more, and newer gear will be more expensive, so if you've spent more in 2 years, the figure will be higher. This in not intended to be science, just a snapshot of what you hold in your collection measured against your most recent income.

 

It is worth picking up the entire collection, regardless of when it was acquired. Very old lenses, like my 1960 Elmar 135/4 don't make much of an impact, whereas some of my more recent purchases do :o

 

It's blunt, but interesting.

 

Cheers

John

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This is a bit of a shocker.

 

Add up your entire Leica gear (including non-Leica M lenses and any R and other equipment etc), let's say at cost, and then calculate what proportion of your income this represents (take last year's taxable income, if it helps).

 

Don't need to know what your gear costs, don't need to know what you earn - this issue is, what does your camera kit represent as a proportion of your last year's earnings (before tax, but after depreciation and amortisation). It's the simplest way to do it, and it is indicative, if not accurate.

 

It looks like I have accumulated what amounts to gear costing the equivalent of 2 months of last year's gross income :eek:

 

Why ever would I want to do that, when I am sure that my wife has it on her finger tips already, to the cent! :)

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It's not about the money. The pleasure continues for years after the cost is forgotten. For that reason, although I could answer this question, as I keep all receipts, I'm not going to. (And my wife knows about everything I've bought. Her line is, if you want it, and you are really going to use it, then get it.)

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It's discretionary spend; it doesn't matter.

 

Once I buy something it is "valueless" unless or until I come to sell it, it is broken or stolen.

 

I am not obsessed by money - it is simply a tool. YMMV.

 

Regards,

 

Bill

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The timing of purchases makes a big difference to the calculation. I bought my first Leica, a second hand M2 in the 1970s for about £200 and used it for thirty years so the cost in relation to recent income was trivial. However I sold my M2 and squandered the £500 I got for it on non Leica digital cameras.

 

Eighteen months ago I returned to the Leica fold buying a new M9, Summilux 50 Asph and a couple of older lenses. When added up this comes to an alarmingly significant percentage of last year's income. I do not intend to upgrade any time soon but expect the lenses to hold their value while the M9 depreciates at about the same rate as my car. I enjoy both driving and photography so the cost is worthwhile.

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I bought into a new M9 and lenses kit in January. The amount was enough to cause vertigo when handing over. However, it's my primary source of income, a tax offset and my business model is such that each job I do the client pays for the hire of my gear as well as the hire of me. It's already paid for and making me money.

 

GAS and tax offset compliment each other wonderfully. :)

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This is a bit of a shocker.

 

Add up your entire Leica gear (including non-Leica M lenses and any R and other equipment etc), let's say at cost, and then calculate what proportion of your income this represents (take last year's taxable income, if it helps).

 

Don't need to know what your gear costs, don't need to know what you earn - this issue is, what does your camera kit represent as a proportion of your last year's earnings (before tax, but after depreciation and amortisation). It's the simplest way to do it, and it is indicative, if not accurate.

 

It looks like I have accumulated what amounts to gear costing the equivalent of 2 months of last year's gross income :eek:

 

Maybe $15,000, but its very liquid, unlike a car.

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