WIRED
Is the best at photographs.
TIRED
$8,000 for a camera that isn’t made for quick focusing, action photos, videos of anything that moves, high-ISO shots, or fiscally responsible human beings? Tack on another few grand for a lens? You're paying more for them to remove the red dot? You're insane, or maybe just a camera snob.
There's this routine you go through when you review a camera. The first thing you do is take it out of the box and shoot whatever mundane object is directly in front of you. It's a throwaway shot, a test to make sure the camera is operational and meets the minimum requirements for calling itself a camera. For this reason, many camera reviewers' SD cards are half-full of pictures of laptop keyboards, pens, coins, coffee cups, and desk flair.
The first thing I shot with the Leica M-P (Typ 240) was a sandwich. The camera's battery finished charging around lunchtime, and I was eager to see what the Leica hype is all about. Also, there was a sandwich right in front of me. It was supposed to be a throwaway shot. It was something else entirely.
It was, quite simply, the greatest sandwich photograph I will ever take.
After devouring my delicious subject I dove into the M-P's menus, flipped the film mode to black-and-white, set focus to infinity, and half-assedly aimed a shot out the office window. The result made me giddy. I couldn’t wait to use this camera to take deliberate, composed photographs.


