AndrewFlannigan
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There's a problem with that assertion.But they were vastly outnumbered by SLR users.
There were many more rangefinder cameras than just Leica. Brands like Canon, Kodak. Minolta, Voigtlander (the original, German, company) Yashica and Zeiss, to name just a few, sold them in the tens of thousands well into the 1970s. The market for SLRs never got close to the market for the fixed lens rangefinder cameras. For wedding specialists, the market was still almost dominated by the TLR into the 1980s, when I did a few weekends helping out a friend, with my old Rolleiflex F.
That may be true, if you can define "better" in this context, which I'm inclined to think no-one can.The SLR changed photography. For the better, imo.
If you can dig out the old production figures for cameras, which were published by the Japanese and German trade associations, I think you'll find that SLRs never accounted for more than 10% by volume even at the height of their popularity - though I'm open to contradiction on that. I find that there are many people who see the camera market in terms of one small slice, whereas it has, for many years, been quite different to how the enthusiast sees it.


