And that's why I use "hood hats" instead of lens caps, and why auto-exposure control - or at least having a TTL light meter - is so important.
Well, I'd be lying if I said that I had never done that - I most definitely have. I can't understand why it took this guy so long to catch on though.WHen you click the shutter and it goes into a 30+ second exposure, its usually a tip off (to me at least). I suppose its possible that he was working in full manual mode.
You still have to remove the hood hat Matthew.
Unless its the one you wear on your head.

Haha I sorta get it - I suppose rangefinders aren't TTL like SLRs so he would still be able to see an image through the viewfinder even with the lens cap on.
However, surely after the fourth of fifth time he should have tried doing something different...
I on the other hand always get stung by the on/off switch. When shooting I usually leave the switch on and let the camera just fall into standby mode. When I'm ready to shoot, just a half-press on the shutter will wake it up again. Of course, when my wife or someone else borrows it and hands it back, they have to turn the switch off, don't they? So the next time I line up for a shot I'll be madly pressing the shutter button to no avail...

NT, I do still have to remove it, but they look like this:
I can't move the focusing ring without the hood hat getting in the way. That's something that's particular to the little rangefinder lenses, which are swallowed up in the neoprene – I have them for a couple of bigger lenses, which aren't quite as ensconced.
Cool. Got a link to these?
Thanks for that.
Funnily enough the carpet fitter was using a Leica today. A laser for measuring. (filmless)
