Leica M3 [+ leicameter + camera tas] - 1957 - Rangefinder camera
![Leica M3 [+ leicameter + camera tas] - 1957 - Rangefinder camera #1.0](https://assets.catawiki.com/image/cw_ldp_l/plain/assets/catawiki/assets/2026/4/14/e/e/3/ee3f426d-84b7-46fc-b8a3-737333114464.jpg)
![Leica M3 [+ leicameter + camera tas] - 1957 - Rangefinder camera #1.0](https://assets.catawiki.com/image/cw_ldp_l/plain/assets/catawiki/assets/2026/4/14/7/b/e/7bee7078-d7fc-44cc-9abb-b968041792b7.jpg)
![Leica M3 [+ leicameter + camera tas] - 1957 - Rangefinder camera #2.1](https://assets.catawiki.com/image/cw_ldp_l/plain/assets/catawiki/assets/2026/4/14/a/4/1/a414f7b6-578e-4153-8abb-b6ac46c10fe2.jpg)
![Leica M3 [+ leicameter + camera tas] - 1957 - Rangefinder camera #3.2](https://assets.catawiki.com/image/cw_ldp_l/plain/assets/catawiki/assets/2026/4/14/1/d/f/1df4fe63-11ac-44a8-ad03-1fa6ed41bdad.jpg)
![Leica M3 [+ leicameter + camera tas] - 1957 - Rangefinder camera #4.3](https://assets.catawiki.com/image/cw_ldp_l/plain/assets/catawiki/assets/2026/4/14/c/f/7/cf78b2d1-6164-4cfd-8110-78e261ed6f47.jpg)
Add to your favourites to get an alert when the auction starts.

Over 30 years experience in photography and camera building.
Catawiki Buyer Protection
Your payment’s safe with us until you receive your object.View details
Trustpilot 4.4 | 134638 reviews
Rated Excellent on Trustpilot.
Description from the seller
The Leica M3 is a legendary 35 mm rangefinder camera that was introduced in 1954 by Leitz Wetzlar (now Leica Camera AG). It was the first model in the famous Leica M series and set the standard for professional rangefinder cameras in the decades that followed. The M3 uses 35 mm film with a frame size of 36 × 24 mm and employs the Leica M mount, which has remained compatible with countless Leica lenses since. The viewfinder of the M3 is renowned for its clarity and precision, with a magnification of 0.91× — the highest of all Leica M cameras — and automatically movable frame lines for 50, 90, and 135 mm lenses. The coupled rangefinder has a long base length of 68.5 mm, offering exceptional accuracy in focusing, especially with fast lenses.
The shutter is fully mechanical and consists of a horizontally running cloth focal-plane shutter with speeds from 1 second to 1/1000 second, plus a B setting. The camera has no built-in light meter, so exposure must be determined manually or with an external meter. Film transport is via a rapid-load system and manual winding with a wind crank, and rewinding is done with a rewind knob. The body is made of brass and chrome-plated metal, giving the M3 its characteristic rugged feel and durability; the weight is about 580 grams (body).
The Leica M3 is a legendary 35 mm rangefinder camera that was introduced in 1954 by Leitz Wetzlar (now Leica Camera AG). It was the first model in the famous Leica M series and set the standard for professional rangefinder cameras in the decades that followed. The M3 uses 35 mm film with a frame size of 36 × 24 mm and employs the Leica M mount, which has remained compatible with countless Leica lenses since. The viewfinder of the M3 is renowned for its clarity and precision, with a magnification of 0.91× — the highest of all Leica M cameras — and automatically movable frame lines for 50, 90, and 135 mm lenses. The coupled rangefinder has a long base length of 68.5 mm, offering exceptional accuracy in focusing, especially with fast lenses.
The shutter is fully mechanical and consists of a horizontally running cloth focal-plane shutter with speeds from 1 second to 1/1000 second, plus a B setting. The camera has no built-in light meter, so exposure must be determined manually or with an external meter. Film transport is via a rapid-load system and manual winding with a wind crank, and rewinding is done with a rewind knob. The body is made of brass and chrome-plated metal, giving the M3 its characteristic rugged feel and durability; the weight is about 580 grams (body).
