My iPhone is one of the best cameras I’ve ever owned, but it’s also incredibly boring compared to a Leica M11 – and that feeling has been rammed home by the arrival of Leica’s new Leitz Phone 3, its third and most interesting smartphone so far.
The Leitz Phone 3’s allure has, I admit, been enhanced by its Leica red dot and the fact that it’s also only available in Japan. This has naturally made me want it more, but even from a distance, I can see it’s packed with little touches that make me wish smartphones weren’t all functional, grey rectangles that take technically ‘perfect’ photos.
For a start, there’s its design. The Leitz Phone 3 is probably a rebranded Sharp Aquos R8 Pro (another Japan-only phone), but it’s also the closest thing to a cross between a phone and a Leica M-series camera. Leica’s given the phone a lovely textured finish and, yes, a lens cap. It’s ridiculous, and I’d lose it in ten minutes – but it’s also a lot of fun.
On a more practical level, the Leitz Phone 3 also has a lot of new software touches. You get an exclusive Golden Hour widget, to tell you when to dash out and get that landscape shot. As much as I love Photopills and its iPhone widget, Leica’s one looks particularly classy and it’s great that it’s built-in. The feature I really like the sound of, though, is the lens simulations.
Glass master
The Leitz Phone 3’s best, and most interesting, new feature is the virtual camera lenses in its Leitz Looks camera mode. These simulate the various aperture stops of three of Leica’s most popular lenses; the Noctilux-M 50mm f/1.2, the Summilux-M 28mm f/1.4, and Summilux-M 35mm f/1.4.
The combined cost of those three lenses is $21,085 / £18,220 / AU$35,070. The Leitz Phone 3 doesn’t have a hope of getting anywhere close to the image quality they can produce – its lenses are likely mostly made from plastic. But I find the concept of software-simulated lenses fascinating, and it’d be great to have the character of Leica-tuned bokeh and vignetting, plus color simulation, in my phone by default.