Leica D-Lux 5 Review: The Anti-Investment—Where Nostalgia Trumps Specs, and Luxury Defies Logic

The CCD Time Capsule

In the autumn of our digital discontent, we return to relics like the Leica D-Lux 5 (2010)—a 10MP compact that smells of decaying CCD charm. To hold this Panasonic-born, Leica-badged paradox is to grasp photography’s lost innocence, when “vintage” meant “last decade” and “luxury” wasn’t code for “resale value.” Its 1/1.63″ sensor? A postage stamp. Its cult status? Unshakable.


Pocket-Sized Theater

  1. Body Politics
    • Dimensions: 110 x 66 x 26mm—svelte as a Rothko postcard
    • Weight: 270g (9.5oz)—heavy enough to feel “premium,” light enough to forget
    • Aesthetic: Leica red dot glowing like a Weimar cabaret sign
  2. Lens Alchemy
    • Specs: 24-90mm f/2-3.3 (equiv)—brighter than its midlife crisis deserves
    • Coating: Leica’s “CCD Veil”—soft contrast masking digital adolescence
  3. Interface Relics
    • Control Dial: Stiff as a Prussian butler
    • Screen: 3″ LCD with 460k dots—nostalgia goggles not included

Sensor Wars

AspectD-Lux 5 (2010)D-Lux 7 (2018)
Sensor1/1.63″ CCD (RIP)4/3″ CMOS
Color ScienceWashed watercolorDigital oil painting
ISO Range80-6400 (theoretical)200-25600 (optimistic)
SoulKodachrome daydreamComputational realism

Field Notes: Autumn Reverie

Scene 1: Crumbling Berlin bookstore

  • f/2 @24mm: Dust motes rendered like cosmic debris
  • ISO 400: Noise pattern mimicking 35mm film grain

Scene 2: Parisian café terrace at dusk

  • JPEG Hack: Contrast +2, Saturation +1—Voilà! “Leica Look” achieved
  • RAW Reality: Flat files begging for Lightroom CPR

The Luxury Paradox

Leica’s open secret: The D-Lux line funds M10s. Yet herein lies its subversive charm—this $300 plastic-and-metal sandwich mocks “investment-grade” camera culture. To shoot D-Lux 5 in 2023 is to declare: “I consume light, not portfolios.”


CCD Gospel

  1. Color Signature: Faded polaroid tones—call it “pre-distressed art”
  2. Dynamic Range: 8 stops—sufficient for haiku, insufficient for HDR
  3. Bokeh: f/3.3 @90mm = background mush (embrace the abstraction)

Who Buys This Delusion?

CCD Evangelists: Worshiping at the altar of “organic” noise
Leica Tourists: Dipping toes before M-plunge
Contrarian Artists: Using technical limits as creative fuel

Avoid If: You confuse megapixels with meaning.


Final Verdict: The Beautiful Folly

The D-Lux 5 is luxury’s inside joke—a $300 lesson in photographic hedonism. For the price of a used iPhone case, you gain:

  • Entry to Leica’s velvet-rope club
  • Proof that obsolescence breeds creativity
  • Permission to enjoy cameras as perishable art

Rating: ⭐⭐⭐/5 (for poets) | ⭐/5 (for realists)
“A camera that sneers: ‘Resale value? I’m too busy making bad photos.’”



CCD whispers,
Red dot bleeds on autumn leaves—
Luxury unbound.