stephenmelvin
Senior Member
Are you certain of your history here? I was recently thumbing through "This is War!," by David Douglas Duncan, surely one of the most amazing war photographers ever to have hit a battlefield. He embedded himself with marines in Korea, and the photography is absolutely stunning. The last page of the book goes into photographic details, and he states that he used two Leicas and had replaced his German lenses with those new Nikkors made in occupied Japan. He said that by this point (the war was ongoing when the book was published), every photographer who came through Japan on his way to Korea was using Nikkors.Film kept getting better, and soon people were actually shooting wedding and serious work on 35. The "revolution" came in 1961, when Vietnam got hot, and American and European journalists hit the place with MF gear, and saw what the Japanese were doing with the new Nikon F.
Next thing you know, Blads and Konis are littering the beeches, and the entire field of wartime journalism has converted to 35mm.
Korea is often mentioned as the turning point in Japan's economic recovery, and the birth of the Nikon legend. Duncan sure makes it sound like 35mm dominated the Korean battlefield, a full decade before we got involved in Vietnam.
Quotes from the book:
"The photographs in the book were made with a Leica IIIC, 35mm camera. During assignments two of these Leicas were carried, on on each side of my body, slung from their leather straps which went around the neck and crossed like ammunition bandoliers in front of my chest. All my rolls of film were in my back-pack, along with a toothbrush, bar of soap, bottle of insect repellent, single blanket, extra pair of socks and a waterproof poncho..."
"...The reason for two Leicas being used was fundamental -- one was fitted with the standard 50mm lens, and the other with a telephoto. ... My Lecias were used around the battlefields of Korea under almost every imaginable handicap -- from the humid, dust-soaked summer months, to the unforgettably cold days of winter near the Changlin Reservoir. The cameras kept working perfectly, even after the film itself started breaking during winding -- just from cold."
"Every photograph in This is War! was taken with a Leica camera, but fitted with Nikkor lenses . . . made in occupied Japan. Prior to the outbreak of the Korean War, Horace Bristol, former Life and Fortune photographer now living in Tokyo, and I began experimenting with the whole new line of Nikkor lenses, made by the Nippon Optical Company, Tokyo, and discovered, to our utter amazement, that their three standard lenses for 35mm cameras were far superior, in our opinions, to any standard 35mm lenses available on the open market -- British, American or German."
"As the Korean War progressed, and other magazine and newspaper photographers arrived in Tokyo, the reputation of the new lenses spread until, within a matter of only three months, there was scarcely a photographer working out of Japan who was not using Nikkors on his cameras."
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