A close up of several cameras bunched together

The only camera I’m allowed to own

By Keith Smith

…ok, so the title is a bit misleading – I’m a grown man, I can own as many cameras as my wife says I can. What I’m taking about here is the hypothetical ‘if’; if I absolutely had to, gun to my head sort of scenario, get rid of all but one of my modest collection of cameras – which one would I save? In the spirit of internet clickbait, the answer may surprise you….

A London City street between offices with bollards on the footpath
Leica M4-P / Voigtlander Ultron 35mm f1.7 / Cinestill 800T

But first – some context

I’ve been fortunate enough to own quite a few cameras over my roughly 40 years (yikes!) of taking photos. This was helped a lot in my younger days by having a job straight out of school working in a camera shop, which gave me access to a vast network of used cameras that could be purchased with a generous discount (particularly if Steve The Assistant Manager was working out the price, as he was notoriously bad at it and almost always under-priced the gear). I variously owned Olympus OM1/2/3/4, Pentax MX & K1000, Minolta 7000 & 9000, various Canon EOS models etc., but while the salary for a humble camera salesman didn’t stretch to anything too premium or exotic, I could still enjoy the temporary use of almost anything else by virtue of being able to borrow whatever I wanted to over the weekends.
However, after a decade and a half of talking about cameras all day every day I got rather sick of the sight of them, so I left that job and sold almost all my gear (the K1000 – which I’d paid £5 for in the late 90s – survived the cull but found itself abandoned in a drawer). Happily it wasn’t very many years before I started feeling the itch to take photos again, so for my 40th birthday I treated myself to a Canon EOS 450D and began a decade in the digital wilderness. Like a lot of folks, I eventually found that unfulfilling (despite trading up to better models) and I didn’t like the images I was getting – nothing technically wrong with them, they were just uninspiring. I didn’t realise it at the time but of course it wasn’t the camera, it was me – I’d delegated all responsibility to the microprocessors and subconsciously removed myself from the process.

Maroon vintage Dodge Charger American muscle car close up
Nikon FM2 / Samyang 85mm f1.4 / Kodak Ultramax 400

Hang in there, I’m getting to the point…

Honestly I don’t remember what specifically made me decide to try film again. I had hauled the old battleaxe K1000 out of its drawer in about 2015 and quite enjoyed using it, but then put it back for another 6 or 7 years. But somewhere around 2022, after everybody’s worlds had been turned upside down but were starting to regain some semblance of normality, I decided to revisit film photography and this time, now being a middle-aged man with lots more disposable income than I’d had in my twenties, I thought I might try some of the cameras I would’ve liked back then but couldn’t afford. Cue turbocharged GAS and an unhealthy eBay habit for the next couple of years. I gradually acquired a pair of Minolta XD7s (very underrated camera), an XDs (same thing), and X500, and a fleet of period correct Rokkors to go with them. I bought a Yashica Mat TLR. I tried a Fed-2 rangefinder. All great cameras – but not quite right.

Cue the second wave of GAS. The Minoltas gave way to Nikons – first, an FM2n, then a dirt cheap FM (£40) with a broken meter, an FE, another FM2 (not-n) and an F3. The Yashica was replaced by a Mamiya C220. The Fed was joined by a Canon P, then a Canon VI-L then a Leica M3, and an M2. Then I sold the Leicas, regretted it, bought both back, sold them again…. stop me if you’ve heard this one before….

Eventually, I’ve ended up here: M6 Classic & M4-P, the 2 Canons, all the Nikons bar the F3, the Mamiya and another Yashica Mat because the Mamiya is just too damned HEAVY sometimes!! The K1000 also persists, but it’s back in its drawer and has been joined by the equally unused Fed. From that list, it’s probably pretty obvious which camera I’d keep, right?

Merry-Go-Round at a funfair with intentional blurring
Leica M4-P / Voigtlander Color-Skopar 28mm f2.8 / Candido 800

Except you’re wrong.

The M6 is, of course, the darling of YouTube and Instagram, and to be fair it’s… ok. But honestly it can’t hold a candle to the M4-P. That’s probably a topic for another post but the TL;DR here is it feels comparatively cheap and nasty. It’s neither of those things, of course, but it’s just nowhere near as lovely as the M4-P. So I’d keep that one then?

Actually, still no.

I love my M4-P. I really do. I love rangefinder focusing, I love the soft ‘snick’ of releasing the shutter, I love just sitting there with it unloaded sometimes and repeatedly winding it on and firing it, and I love the tiny Voigtlander Color-Skopar lenses I have for it… but it’s too limiting for (some of) the things I like to photograph. Sometimes I just need the precision framing, closer focus, and depth-of-field visibility of an SLR (not to mention ease of use of polarising filters). FM2n then? Nope. James Tocchio at Casual Photophile wrote a great article about his search for the Leica M of SLRs, and he came tantalisingly close to finding it (in my opinion) but nevertheless hadn’t by the end of his piece. He dismissed the FM3a – which I’ve never used but I imagine it feels much the same as an FM2 – because, in his words, it ‘feels a little hollow’. I actually agree with that, based on my experience with my 2 FM2s. If only James had gone slightly further back in time, because my choice of forever camera would be (drum roll)… the original FM. Yes, even specifically my one with the broken meter. What?? Let me explain.

Wide angle view of an office building in black and white, looking up
Nikon FM / Tamron 17mm f3.5 / Kentmere Pan 400

I’m not fussed about using a meter most of the time. I can Sunny-16 my way though most situations and have a plethora of hand held or shoe-mountable meters for when I can’t. And in my view, the lack of a meter isn’t the only thing (my) FM has in common with the best Leicas. It has practically the same spec, certainly the same shutter speed range, but with better flash sync. Not that I use flash (shut up). It’s smooth – smoother than the FM2s, for sure, even if not *quite* Leica smooth (but close enough for me). It’s easier to load too, at least for someone who is historically more accustomed to SLRs anyway (not that I’ve ever struggled with the M4-P). The build quality feels quite Leica-ish to me, and it certainly feels better made than its successors. To address James’ point, it doesn’t feel ‘hollow’. I don’t know if Nikon used thinner brass for the later models but there’s a solidity to the FM which the FM2s just don’t seem to have to the same degree; a particular irritation is the back door release collar around the rewind crank, which is rattly plastic on the FM2s – it’s solid and metal on the original FM.

Plus of course, even without a functioning meter I can still enjoy the incredibly useful ability to see what the current shutter speed and aperture are from within the viewfinder. And for that matter, while I’m peering in there I can easily adjust the shutter speed dial with a fingertip, which I cannot do with the M4-P’s tiny dial (I kinda can with the plastic dial of the M6 but it’s not as easy as with the Nikon). It’s even better looking than the FM2s, lacking as it does the model name splashed across the front, and the shutter / mirror mechanism sounds and feels better damped, quieter and less ‘clacky’. In fact it’s really rather pleasant sounding, a trait it shares with the FE.

And it’s compact. Truthfully it’s really not much bigger than an M with a fast-ish lens on the front – I did own a Nokton 50mm f1.5 (LTM) until recently, and when mounted that makes for a package that’s really not significantly smaller than the FM with its Nikkor equivalent on the front.

In this imaginary scenario where I can only keep one camera, I would certainly miss some of the features of the other cameras, probably the rangefinder focussing system most of all, but on a pros and cons tickbox basis and allowing for a little bit of impractical, emotional irrationality around how nice a camera looks and feels, the FM is a clear winner for me (and it doesn’t hurt that it cost me 1/35th the price of the M4-P). Luckily my wife says I’ve been a good boy so I don’t have to get rid of anything (yet)…

Detail of the London Eye featuring two pods and some tree branches
Leica M4-P / Voigtlander Color-Skopar 50mm f2.5 LTM / Kodak Portra 400

Thanks for reading!

https://the.fotoapp.co/keith_not_kevin
@keithnotkevin.bsky.social

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About The Author

By Keith Smith
Started taking photos in the early 1980s when my parents gave me a Kodak 110 camera they’d received as a free gift for booking a holiday. 45 years later and the gear has improved but I’m still the same excited kid taking snaps of anything that catches my eye
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Comments

Jeff T. on The only camera I’m allowed to own

Comment posted: 15/04/2026

The FM is certainly an elegant camera, and you make a good case for it.
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Andrew on The only camera I’m allowed to own

Comment posted: 15/04/2026

Great article, and of course it makes us all think! And the conclusions we reach can be surprising and are certain to be very diverse.
I do a lot of travelling for business and pleasure, and often end up in interesting places that I would like to photograph. For me, light weight, small size, inconspicuousness and ability for the camera to “get out of the way” and allow me to focus on the image matter most.
And for that reason my surprising choice would be my Nikon 1 J5 and 10-30 power zoom lens plus LM to N1 adapter. I can have it in my brief case at a business meeting and no one knows it’s there, and then photograph on my travels to and from meetings. And I love the simple and intuitive menu system that doesn’t get in the way of the picture. And provided the light is reasonable, the photos are great.
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Geoff on The only camera I’m allowed to own

Comment posted: 15/04/2026

A good read Keith and certainly one I can empathise with. I have the FM2 and the MP-4 and also the FE. Recently I have been using the FE and rediscovering what a fine camera this has proven to be. The FE is silky smooth and engineered every bit as good as the MP-4 and it can be used in both manual and aperture priority. The meter needle display is pure analogue mastery and gives all the information one would need. So, similar pedigree to the FM but just a bit more versatile in use.
Don’t get me wrong I like the MP-4 but you can’t close focus, can’t use telephoto easily, can’t use macro easily, can’t use filters easily, in short not as versatile and more restrictive. So, I tend to gravitate to FE and all or a fraction of the cost. Similar experience to you with FM -what does this mean?
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JA on The only camera I’m allowed to own

Comment posted: 15/04/2026

I had an fm2 for about half an hour before i listed it on ebay.

Its quite an unpleasant camera if you are left eyed. The level pokes you in the right eye!
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Art Meripol replied:

Comment posted: 15/04/2026

I used my FM2 in my newspaper days and always preferred it over my F3. I am left eyed but never really noticed that problem. Now you might have ruined that camera for me. It'll be the first thing I notice.

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Thomas Wolstenholme on The only camera I’m allowed to own

Comment posted: 15/04/2026

Yes, I'm with Geoff. After all these years - I've owned my Nikon FE since about 1980 - I still like the ease of handling, the adaptability, the solidity of the camera, the sister to the original FM. If I had purchased an FM at the time, by now I'd likely still be using it with the same comments as for my FE.
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David Pauley on The only camera I’m allowed to own

Comment posted: 15/04/2026

Thanks Keith for the highly entertaining and lively read, and for the excellent photos. You seem to find keepers regardless of camera system! As to the thought experiment despite the relatively slow, non-interchangeable lens, I would almost definitely keep my Rolleiflex 2.8 or 3.5F as a desert island camera. It can't do everything but what it does it does beautifully. That said my daughter uses a Nikon FA from the same era as your top choice and it's a very compelling and versatile camera. Thank goodness our spouses aren't actually imposing such a burdensome choice on us!
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Simon Foale on The only camera I’m allowed to own

Comment posted: 15/04/2026

I looked up the weight specs for the FM and the FM2. The FM2 is 50g lighter, which might account for the 'hollow' feeling. This is certainly not something that bothers me about my FM2. How happy are you with the Tamron 17mm?
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Art Meripol on The only camera I’m allowed to own

Comment posted: 15/04/2026

Please, don't make me choose among my children. I love each for its idiosyncrasies. I am totally with you on the M4p. I am enamored with the M3 but I keep coming back to the M4p. It has a magnetic draw to me. I never owned an FM so I cannot compare it with my Fm2. I used that and an F3 in my newspaper days and always preferred the FM2. I liked the smaller lighter size, the more discrete profile. So now I'm incredibly curious about the FM. What a fun inspiring post.
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Scott Ferguson on The only camera I’m allowed to own

Comment posted: 15/04/2026

Hey Keith,
Great post! Your photos are very cool, whichever camera you are shooting with. My 'desert island camera' is my M3 -- I'm curious about the comparisons between the different M's you've owned and how you settled on the M4-P -- I've heard good things, but never tried one. If I was a 35mm SLR shooter, I think I'd also go with a Nikon. I tried shooting a roll in an F2 I bought my son about a year ago and really like the viewfinder and focusing optics and thought they were superior to the Leica R6.2, which I've also shot with. But I prefer the rangefinder interface to an SLR, at least for the kind of shooting I like to do on 35mm, which is a little more about being spontaneous and catching moments and moods. I did a post last summer that I thought was going to be comparing Leica R glass to Leica M glass, but it ended up comparing the Leica R viewfinder to the Leica M3's, which won for me. If I want to get deeply into the visual aesthetics of an image as opposed to timing and spontaneity, I do see the value of an SLR, but for that type of shooting, I have my 'other desert island camera', my Hasselblad 503CW, which I think has the best viewfinder of any camera I've ever tried, and amazing world class lenses as well. Having tried a variety of different high end cameras since I took up film photography in the summer of 2024, including Leica M3, M240 Monochrom, M10 digital, Leica R6.2, Nikon F2, Rolleiflex and Hasselblad, I've discovered I don't have GAS as it relates to camera bodies and systems, but I do when it comes to lenses. If you're interested, here's a link to my post comparing Leica R and Leica M. https://www.35mmc.com/27/10/2025/leica-vs-leica-comparing-leica-m-and-leica-r-cameras-and-lenses/
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Walter Reumkens on The only camera I’m allowed to own

Comment posted: 15/04/2026

But you shouldn’t completely ignore reality. This actually happened to me just before Easter in a similar situation: the shutter on my 1995 Nikon FM2/T refused to fire when I picked it up again. So steer clear of special editions; first you reach for – as I did – the standard FM2, FE2 or F3HP from the days when you’d head out in any weather, and then something like this just happens. The Nikon service centre in Germany accepted the camera for repair, but also informed me that a repair was no longer possible due to a lack of spare parts. Hope springs eternal, and five working days later I received the message: “The shutter jam has been fixed, functionality has been restored, the camera functions have been checked and are in order.” And just in time for Easter, I received a lovely Easter surprise: the repair was free of charge! Perhaps because I have a few Nikon products registered there; I don’t know.

What I’m trying to say is: Nikon is a good choice, but having too many cameras is simply too much if you don’t use them regularly. And would it be free of charge? With Leica, I’d have my doubts. Not even after five working days, but rather after four months, as happened to an acquaintance of mine who, two months after buying his Q3, developed an autofocus problem; despite the totally exorbitant prices, they wouldn’t even exchange the camera or provide a loaner.

The Leica M4-P is certainly a very good choice, better than the M3 and M6 and much better than the M5. I don’t miss having a Leica, thanks to the Nikons and the Bessa R3M in my collection. I’ve just had a look at the prices; for the price of a Leica M4-P (body), I can get 10 (ten!) Nikon FMs in good condition. That really makes you wonder whether you should get yourself an FM as well....

Thanks for the interesting post and the great photos, Keith.



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Bradley Newman on The only camera I’m allowed to own

Comment posted: 15/04/2026

This post really struck a chord with me. I own my dad's FM. In fact, that's the camera where this insane obsession started for me four decades ago. We had a darkroom in the house, and I used the FM for my high school photography class assignments.

When I rediscovered film photography awhile back, his FM lay buried in a drawer next to an equally ignored Pentax 645. Pretty soon thereafter, a friend offered me an FE, and another his trusty F3HP, and even a terrific Canon AE1. I wound up with a great selection of cameras, none of which I had to buy. Since I'd lusted after a Leica M, I bought myself a really nice 1965-vintage single stroke M3. Recently, my wife surprised me with a gorgeous M6 as a gift.

Here's the revelation, though. I love the experience of shooting with my Leicas. I never thought I'd be a "Leica Guy." But, boy do I love the results. However, none of my cameras are as intuitive and quick to shoot as my trusty FE. It feels the smallest in my hands of all the SLRs, and the match needle setup for the meter is phenomenal. So, I'll join the FE brigade: if I had to choose one camera, it'd be the FE with my beloved Nikkor 105mm F/2.5 lens.

One final observation: this article makes me want to go back and revisit the FM. One complaint I've had when compared to the match needles of the FE is the three-LED meter. Having spent some quality time with my new-to-me M6 makes me think it's not such a bad setup after all.
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