logo
Snappy birthday: Germany's Leica camera turns 100

Snappy birthday: Germany's Leica camera turns 100

Local Germany06-04-2025
"I have to be very quick and discreet," said the Berlin-based artist who captures reflections of people walking past windows, their contours merging with the shapes behind the glass.
Stuenkel's compact Leica is the perfect camera for the job, the 51-year-old told AFP.
Famous for its pocket-sized and retro-style devices, the Leica brand is celebrating a milestone as it marks 100 years since its first commercial camera was presented to the public.
The Leica company was founded in 1869 by the entrepreneur Ernst Leitz in the city of Wetzlar in western Germany, originally manufacturing optical lenses and microscopes.
But it was not until 1925 that the Leica 1 camera was introduced at the Leipzig Spring Fair.
Leica cameras went on to become the tool of choice for prominent photographers for years to come, including legendary photojournalists Robert Capa and Henri Cartier-Bresson.
Even today, the nifty camera with a red dot still holds its own in a market dominated by Japanese giants such as Sony, Canon and Nikon.
Advertisement
'Better photographer'
Working with a Leica "makes you a better photographer", said British artist Alan Schaller, who uses a monochrome version of the M11 -- a digital camera with manual controls.
Schaller has got so used to adjusting the aperture, shutter speed and light sensitivity manually that he said he can now do it "faster than any automatic device".
One hundred years on, Leica cameras are still assembled by hand in a factory in Wetzlar, north of Frankfurt.
In the dust-free assembly room, 70 workers equipped with precision screwdrivers and anti-static tweezers build the devices by hand from more than 600 parts.
It's a painstaking job "that requires a lot of experience", said Peter Schreiner, head of camera assembly.
In another room nearby, lenses are polished to within 0.1 millionth of a metre before they are glued and lacquered.
After a difficult decade in the 2000s, Leica has turned its fortunes around by fully embracing digital cameras, which now account for the vast majority of sales.
The company still makes a handful of analogue devices -- including the M6, a cousin of the M11.
Leica's chief executive Matthias Harsch said sales are projected to have reached a record €600 million ($660 million) in 2024/25, with annual growth close to 10 percent.
Advertisement
Leitz Phone
Total global sales of digital cameras grew by only four percent last year, to €6.8 billion, according to Germany's GfK consumer institute.
Innovation remains at the heart of the brand, with a research budget of "more than 10 percent of sales", according to Harsch.
Beyond cameras, Leica has diversified into watches and laser projectors for home cinema, as well as cameras for smartphones.
Leica lenses can now be found in smartphones made by the Chinese company Xiaomi as well as in the Leitz Phone, designed by Leica with Sharp for the Japanese market.
But new technology can never replace the romance of the Leica camera, according to Harsch.
"With a phone, you take snapshots. Everything else is photography," he said, insisting that the two strands of the company's work enjoy a "peaceful coexistence".
Leica's phone cameras and its traditional models are also worlds apart when it comes to price -- the M11 costs upwards of €9,000, plus a few thousand euros extra for a lens.
North America represents around 20 percent of Leica's total sales and the company is "assessing the impact" of tariffs announced by US President Donald Trump, Harsch said.
Leica operates more than 120 of its own stores worldwide, including in the United States, with more openings planned this year.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Which German universities are ranked among the 'best outside of the US'?
Which German universities are ranked among the 'best outside of the US'?

Local Germany

time6 hours ago

  • Local Germany

Which German universities are ranked among the 'best outside of the US'?

When various rankings of universities around the world are compared, a few of Germany's top schools stand out. Several Germany-based institutions rank among the top 25 universities in the world outside of the US, according to various rankings. Online media platform Visual Capitalist recently published a graphic that highlighted the "top 25 universities outside of the US". It included the top 25 non-US universities according to three separate rankings, including; the Times Higher Education ranking, the QS World University Rankings, and the Academic Ranking of World Universities. The Times Higher Education ranking included the most universities - more than 2,000 from 115 countries. Of these, a number of German universities secured top spots. RANKED: The 'best' universities in Germany for 2025 Germany's top-ranked schools this year Each of the evaluations had their own scoring system, so Germany's top schools earned different rankings between them. But three of Germany's top universities scored among the top 25 schools outside of the US in two of the rankings, and one school made it into the top 25 in all three. The German university that cinched a top spot in all three rankings was the Technical University of Munich (TUM). TUM was among the top 10 universities in the world out side of the US, according to the Times Higher Education ranking. Referring to itself as a "global marketplace of knowledge", TUM has a high proportion of international students – at 43 percent according to Times Higher Education data. The other German universities that claimed top 25 positions according to two of the rankings were Ludwig Maximilians University (LMU) – also in Munich – and Heidelberg University. LMU received the highest ratings in its Arts and Humanities department, so it may be a better fit than the technical university for students interested in subjects in these fields. (LMU's website notes that admissions for the coming winter term are open until September 17th.) Advertisement Founded in 1386, Heidelberg University is the oldest higher education institution found in modern-day Germany. Among the perks of enrolling here is living in the surrounding city of Heidelberg, which is renowned for its scenic old town, and the surrounding forest, in addition to being a happening university hub. READ ALSO: Weimar to Heidelberg - The best German university towns for foreign students Germany was historically a world leader in higher education Germany ranks among the world's leading countries for top-notch universities today, but comes in behind the US and the UK in terms of number of high-rated schools. Interestingly, Germany was arguably the world leader in higher education at the beginning of the 20th century. In fact, German was the dominant language of science up until around the Second World War . At this time, the Germany's influence on science was ultimately reduced after many researchers and scientists fled Germany to escape persecution by the Nazis. In the decades since then, the US has become home to many of the world's top universities. But with the Trump Administration having made massive cuts to funding that US universities rely on, and trying to influence enrolment decisions , there has been speculation that the roles could now be reversed - with students from the US potentially pushed to seek opportunities abroad . READ ALSO: What Americans need to know about studying in Germany Advertisement

In China's Factory Heartland, Warehouses Weather Trump Tariffs
In China's Factory Heartland, Warehouses Weather Trump Tariffs

Int'l Business Times

time7 hours ago

  • Int'l Business Times

In China's Factory Heartland, Warehouses Weather Trump Tariffs

Labourer Shuai Hang went a week without work earlier this year when sky-high US tariffs on Chinese goods overwhelmed the warehouse he works at and slowed the company's US-bound parcels to a trickle. But on Tuesday, after US President Donald Trump announced a truce on those duties would be extended, the depot in southern China's manufacturing hub Guangzhou was alive with noise as workers stuffed trucks with packages of clothes and kitchenware. Many are destined for the doorsteps of US customers of Chinese-founded online shopping giant Temu. "Tariffs impact our daily lives," said 31-year-old Shuai, whose monthly pay of more than 10,000 yuan ($1,400) had dropped by a third previously. "If tariffs are slightly lower, then there are more outgoing shipments, and then we have higher wages," he said. Trump's tariff policies since taking office have upended global trade and set off a blistering tit-for-tat with Beijing -- but in May the two major economies agreed to a fragile truce, with each temporarily lowering levies on the other's goods. That agreement was extended to November by Trump on Monday, hours before it expired. At the height of the tariffs, said Shuai, who has been loading parcels for Guangzhou-based logistics company Weijiang International for a year, "there was not a single truck" for him to fill, so he couldn't work. Overall deliveries dropped by about 20 percent in May, according to Weijiang's founder Xiong Wei, with the US market making up around a quarter of their cross-border business. But business has recovered since July, he said. Xiong said he hadn't lost sleep over the looming expiration of the 90-day tariff truce this week, as he had expected it would be renewed. "We might have been worried in May, but now we are indifferent," said Xiong. "We are used to it". These days the warehouse is sending out 100 tonnes of packages every 24 hours, with up to 70 trucks making trips. On Tuesday industrial fans whirred as sweat-slicked workers methodically scanned yellow, black and sage green bundles into lorries. Xiong's company has recently invested in its own warehouse in Chicago. In many ways the uncertainty provided opportunity for smaller logistics companies like theirs, said manager Chen Weiyan, as they have taken the chance to expand their market. "The cards have been reshuffled," he said. Around 30 percent of the parcels moved by Weijiang International end up in a different warehouse, this one owned by Temu-parent PDD, where they are unloaded, repacked and readied for a flight across the ocean. While the truce is welcome, Shuai, who packs three to four tonnes in a truck daily, said he still pays close attention to tariff news. "For those of us who have travelled over 1,000 kilometres to work here, we definitely don't want frequent breaks. We all want to earn more money," said the native of neighbouring Guizhou province. Working at the warehouse was less tiring than labouring at a construction site, and earning money had become more difficult in the past two years, he said. Chen, the manager, was bullish. "We will not give up this market," he said. "Folks in America need our goods". Shipments to the United States, which makes up around a quarter of Weijiang's cross-border business, shipments had recovered after falling earlier due to the tariff uncertainty, founder Xiong Wei says AFP The uncertainty provided opportunity for smaller logistics firms like Weijiang, said manager Chen Weiyan (R), as they have taken the chance to expand their market AFP

Trump Says Nvidia To Give US Cut Of China Chip Sales
Trump Says Nvidia To Give US Cut Of China Chip Sales

Int'l Business Times

timea day ago

  • Int'l Business Times

Trump Says Nvidia To Give US Cut Of China Chip Sales

President Donald Trump on Monday confirmed reports that semiconductor giant Nvidia would pay the United States 15 percent of its revenues from sales of certain artificial intelligence chips to China. Speaking to reporters at the White House, Trump argued that Nvidia's "H20" chips are "obsolete," despite previously being targeted for export restrictions. He said that to lift the restrictions, he had agreed to a 15-percent cut from Nvidia: "If I'm going to do that, I want you to pay us as a country something, because I'm giving you a release. I released them only from the H20." The California-based company produces some of the world's most advanced semiconductors but cannot ship its most cutting-edge chips to China due to concerns that Beijing could use them to enhance military capabilities. Nvidia developed the H20 -- a less powerful version of its AI processing units -- specifically for export to China. That plan stalled when the Trump administration tightened export licensing requirements in April. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang met with Trump at the White House last week and agreed to give the federal government the cut from its revenues, a highly unusual arrangement in the international tech trade, according to reports in the Financial Times, Bloomberg and New York Times. "While we haven't shipped H20 to China for months, we hope export control rules will let America compete in China and worldwide," a Nvidia spokesperson told AFP. The company spokesperson added: "America cannot repeat 5G and lose telecommunication leadership. America's AI tech stack can be the world's standard if we race." Investors are betting that AI will transform the global economy, and last month Nvidia -- the world's most valuable company and a leading designer of high-end AI chips -- became the first company ever to hit $4 trillion in market value. The firm has, however, become entangled in trade tensions between China and the United States, which are waging a heated battle for dominance to produce the chips that power AI. The United States has been restricting which chips Nvidia can export to China on national security grounds. After Huang's meeting with Trump, the Commerce Department on Friday started granting the licenses for chip sales, according to media reports. Silicon Valley-based AMD will also pay 15 percent of revenue on Chinese sales of its MI308 chips, which it was previously barred from exporting to the country. AMD did not respond to requests for comment. The move comes as the Trump administration has been imposing stiff tariffs, with goals varying from addressing US trade imbalances, wanting to reshore manufacturing, and pressuring foreign governments to change policies. A 100 percent tariff on many semiconductor imports came into effect last week, with exceptions for tech companies that announce major investments in the United States. "It's a political tariff in everything but name, brokered in the shadow of heightened US-China tech tensions," Stephen Innes of SPI Asset Management said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store