Home Cameras/Lenses Leica Ashley Heuchan’s camera collection goes under the hammer

Ashley Heuchan’s camera collection goes under the hammer

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  Ashley Heuchan, formerly a well-known Perth dealer, shown here with an early
Ashley Heuchan, formerly a well-known Perth dealer, shown here with an early “Barnack” Leica, just one of the items in the sale of over 1,000 pieces

Australian reader Andy McCourt has tipped us off about an auction of camera collectables which has just got underway and will continue until December 12. There are over a thousand items to be processed and they will go up in lots of 50 to 100. Andy is helping the seller, Ashley Heuchan, to bring in more participants. He has asked if we could publish this overview of the sale,

Camera collector Ashley Heuchan has seen many changes in photography over his 50 years in the business. “Digital and mobile phone cameras are great,” he says, “but there is a magic about film, processing and the incredibly engineered cameras that used them that is hard to describe.”

“Photography changed the world from around 1850, in much the same way as the printing press did four hundred years earlier in 1450. By the 1880s, anyone could take a faithful photographic image on a relatively inexpensive camera, invented by George Eastman of Kodak fame where I began my career; and produce beautiful black and white prints. Ordinary people could finally record and share what they saw and it got better and better as the 1900s wore on.”

  The auction includes two boxed and unused Leica M6 models
The auction includes two boxed and unused Leica M6 models

The durability of film-using cameras has been compared to the resurgence of vinyl LP records, collectable wristwatches like Rolex and Omega and even old valve radios. Film is still manufactured in 35mm and 120 rollfilm sizes and even 4” x 5” cut sheet and 127 rollfilm are available new on eBay – with the processing services to go along with them.

Some professional and art photographers refuse to move away from film cameras, especially those made by German maestros Leica. “The romance of film cameras is captured by the greats such as Henri Cartier-Bresson, Rosenthal, Liebowitz, Ansel Adams, David Bailey, Litchfield, Helmut Newton, Karsh and the great war photographers like Robert Capa whose work graced the pages of Life magazine. There are dozens of others.”

Heuchan’s rare camera collection, accumulated over 50 years, is being auctioned off in several tranches at Collectable Cameras 4Sale  starting December 1st 2017. For a while they were on display in his Murray Street, Perth business but space became a problem and he retired from the business, so they went into storage for years. “Even now, as I go through hundreds of boxes, I am amazed at what I find,” he says.

Featured in the first collectablecameras4sale auction is, one of the very first Nikon cameras made post-war, as General MacArthur re-engineered the Japanese economy to a peacetime one. It still bears the engraved ‘Made in Occupied Japan’ on its baseplate. Only about 400 ever made it to market from this batch. Another is a production model of the very first 35mm single-lens reflex camera – made in Russia by Gomz and dubbed the ‘Sport.’

There are numerous Leicas from 1930 up to the 1980s including two ‘M6’ 1987 ones that have never been unpacked – they are still in sealed boxes! There are a few Leica ‘M’ mount lenses that can still be used on the latest Leica digital cameras. “Leica made superlative lenses,” says Heuchan, “and have kept the M bayonet mount going so, you can fit a 60-year old Leica Summilux lens on a brand new Leica M9 digital – and see the difference a great lens makes!”

The auction includes other makes such as Zeiss, Voigtländer, Canon (also a Made in Occupied Japan model), Rolleiflex and a company called Riken who made a miniature ‘spy camera’ – later to be re-named Ricoh. A 1901 Century Grand wooden plate camera recalls the days when photographers put a dark cloth over their heads – something today’s iPhone users might also think about in bright sunlight!

The first of several auctions of Heuchan’s vast collection starts on December 1st and ends on December 12th, the unpacking and grading of the next lot already underway for early 2018.

www.collectablecameras4sale.com

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4 COMMENTS

  1. Thanks Andy. I have passed the details of the 1949 Nikon to a friend who is involved in the Nikon Society and who has a lot of Nikon collector contacts around the world.

    William

  2. Thanks for your insights William. I am helping Ashley with the auctions. As someone once wrote ‘quality never goes out of style’ and, like Rolexes, Morgan cars and Faberge eggs, there’s nothing as high-quality as Leica in rangefinders. It’s a privilege to go through his collection and be astounded that 80-year old shutters still work and I wonder at the stories behind some of the cameras…what photos they took, who used them. I had to be physically restrained from opening the M6 sealed boxes! Supporting your observations is that we now have collectors from 64 cities registered. As there are only about 8 in Australia, we must deduce that the others are global, and not in New Zealand!

  3. Best of luck with the auction, Ashley. There are two types of people usually at auctions. Users looking for bargains in working condition and hard core collectors looking for rare items like that Nikon One from 1949. The Rahn Photographica (now owned by Leica) auction of non Leica items in Frankfurt yesterday went well. The Leica section was this morning. I was busy and just dipped in and out of it. As far as I could see, prices held up well and, for user items, the prices obtained generally somewhat above estimate. Desirable collector items still fetched strong prices. Most Leica items found a purchaser. Some people have been predicting the demise of the collector camera market, but there is no sign of this in Europe. Mark Twain would be pleased.

    William

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