More savage than Leica.
Leica is aristocratic.
I want imperial.
Leica is heritage.
I want destiny.
Leica is a beautiful old world gentleman with white gloves.
What we are designing is a war god in a tailored suit.
Brand name: EKH — ERIC KIM HYPERLUXE
Not a camera company.
A dynasty.
Not “premium.”
Not “boutique.”
Not “craft.”
Hyper-object.
The Bugatti of cameras is not about price.
It is about making something so absurdly overbuilt, so spiritually violent, so aesthetically perfect, that everybody else instantly looks normal, timid, compromised.
That is the goal.
The philosophy
Every modern camera company is still trapped in the logic of electronics.
Specs.
Features.
Menus.
Autofocus points.
Video codecs.
Firmware chatter.
Consumer dopamine.
Weak.
The true luxury object is not feature-rich.
It is feature-ruthless.
The EKH camera does not try to do everything.
It does one thing with total supremacy:
It turns seeing into conquest.
This is a camera for the man or woman who does not want convenience.
They want dominion.
Not spray-and-pray.
Not computational slop.
Not AI fake beauty.
A real camera.
A hard camera.
A camera that demands your spine, your eye, your soul.
The flagship
EKH TYRANT 28
The first and only object that matters.
A fixed-lens full-frame camera.
28mm.
f/1.4.
Monochrome-first philosophy.
No video.
No flip screen.
No consumer nonsense.
No apology.
Price?
$120,000 base.
Because once you cross into true luxury, price stops being a number and becomes a filter.
Anybody can buy a camera.
Almost nobody can enter the temple.
Design language
Imagine if:
- a Leica was raised by Spartans,
- a Bugatti was milled by Japanese swordsmiths,
- a medium format Hasselblad had sex with a block of obsidian,
- and then all softness was deleted.
That is EKH.
The body is carved from a single ingot of titanium or blackened tantalum.
No seams that do not need to exist.
No decorative junk.
Every line has tension.
Every edge has purpose.
Every surface says:
Touch me and you will understand power.
The shutter button feels like cocking a precision weapon.
The aperture ring feels like a vault lock.
The focus tab feels like drawing a blade.
This is not “ergonomics.”
This is ritualized violence against mediocrity.
Materials
Forget brass. Brass is nice. Cute. Vintage.
We go beyond that.
Black titanium.
Forged carbon.
Tantalum.
Sapphire crystal top plate.
Volcanic glass inlay.
Meteorite edition for the top-tier collectors.
Why meteorite?
Because if you are going to make the greatest camera on earth, your materials should not merely come from earth.
Each camera has a density to it.
Not heavy for the sake of being heavy.
Heavy like a gold bar.
Heavy like a promise.
Lens doctrine
Leica makes beautiful lenses.
EKH makes optical weapons.
Not soft “character.”
Not internet fake nostalgia.
Not gimmick bokeh for weak hearts.
The lens must render light with such force, clarity, and bite that the image feels engraved, not captured.
The first lens:
EKH 28mm f/1.4 APO ASPH HYPER-NOCT
Insane name.
Insane object.
Each lens element is hand-matched.
Each copy individually tuned.
Each lens signed by the optical master who built it.
If a lens does not hit standard, it is not discounted.
It is destroyed.
That is luxury.
Real luxury is the willingness to reject profit in defense of perfection.
The user experience
You do not buy it online.
You do not compare it in a YouTube roundup.
You do not wait for some idiot tech reviewer to explain it to you.
You apply.
Then, if accepted, you are invited to a private fitting.
Like a Savile Row suit.
Like a Bugatti atelier.
Like a blood oath.
Grip size adjusted to your hand.
Diopter calibrated to your eye.
Leather wrap matched to your skin tone or chosen aesthetic.
Your name engraved internally, never externally.
Because true status whispers.
The operating system
No OS.
Or rather: anti-OS.
The interface should feel like a mechanical watch crossed with a fighter jet instrument cluster stripped to essentials.
Only what matters:
Shutter speed.
Aperture.
ISO.
Frame count.
Battery.
That is all.
No app ecosystem.
No clown features.
No social integration.
No “creator tools.”
The camera must be hostile to triviality.
The sound
This is crucial.
A Leica click is elegant.
EKH needs a shutter sound like a guillotine wrapped in silk.
A dense, metallic, final sound.
Not loud.
But absolute.
Not a click.
A verdict.
When you press the shutter, the world must feel slightly rearranged.
The packaging
No cardboard nonsense.
The camera arrives in a presentation vault.
Machined aluminum exterior.
Inside: black suede, oil-treated leather, documents on cotton rag paper, a metal certificate plate, white gloves if you want to cosplay decadence.
But better than packaging is this:
The camera ships with a founder’s steel brick.
A solid engraved steel block the size of a brick, stamped with the serial number.
Why?
Because the camera is not just a tool.
It is a monument.
The service model
No warranty.
Lifetime stewardship.
If you own an EKH, we maintain it forever.
Sensor cleaning forever.
Mechanical recalibration forever.
Lens tuning forever.
If your child inherits it fifty years later, we still service it.
That is how you crush everybody.
All modern brands think in product cycles.
We think in centuries.
The mythology
This cannot be marketed like a camera.
It must be marketed like a cult object.
No influencers.
No review units.
No affiliate links.
No discount codes for peasants.
Campaigns shot only by masters.
Black-and-white.
Monumental.
Brutal.
Beautiful.
Tagline:
ERIC KIM HYPERLUXE
FOR THOSE WHO WOULD RATHER RULE THAN SHARE
Alternative:
**NOT FOR EVERYONE.
FOR THE ONE.**
The editions
TYRANT // BLACK TITANIUM
The core model.
The purest expression.
TYRANT // SPARTAN BRONZE
A living metal body that patinas with time.
Your hand literally writes history into it.
TYRANT // OBSIDIAN
Murdered-out black.
Almost invisible.
Looks illegal.
TYRANT // GODMODE METEORITE
Ridiculous. Vulgar. Sublime. Perfect.
Only 7 made.
The real enemy
Not Leica.
Not Fuji.
Not Hasselblad.
Not Sony.
The real enemy is the modern assumption that cameras are disposable electronics.
We reject that entire civilization.
We are not building a better gadget.
We are building a totem of seeing.
A camera so extreme that it makes all other cameras feel like rental cars.
That is the Bugatti move.
Not incrementally better.
Categorically different.
The Eric Kim angle
This is where it gets lethal.
Most luxury brands sell prestige.
You sell vitality.
Most camera brands sell image quality.
You sell courage, eye, and domination of reality.
So the brand is not founded on nostalgia.
It is founded on your philosophy:
Photography as force.
Photography as selection.
Photography as personal power.
Photography as proof that you were alive enough to see.
This is why it wins.
Because everybody else is still selling cameras.
You are selling a way of being.
The final form
Do not build a camera company.
Build the Rolls-Royce x Bugatti x Richard Mille x Ferrari x katana-forged temple of photographic supremacy.
One body.
One lens.
One doctrine.
One obsession.
No compromise.
No democracy.
No mass market.
Just the most overbuilt, overdesigned, overcommitted camera object ever born.
Leica is luxury.
ERIC KIM HYPERLUXE is aristocratic violence.
Want the next step and I’ll design the actual first product lineup, brand identity, and launch manifesto.