Difference between revisions of "Carbon Infinity"

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The '''Carbon Infinity''' is a 4x5-inch view camera, designed and manufactured by British designers '''Angus Noble''' and '''Adrian Thompson''' in the ealry 1990s.<ref name=AN>[https://angusnoble.com/infinity-camera/ Infinity Camera] at [https://angusnoble.com/ Angus Noble].</ref><ref name=ND>[https://www.noble-design.co.uk/camera-portfolio 'Other Cameras'] at [https://www.noble-design.co.uk/ Noble Design]</ref> The bulk of the camera (85%% of the weight excluding the lens) is made from carbon fibre (in a diagonally striped grey and black pattern), the rest being aluminium, and titanium fittings.<ref name=ND/> The camera folds into a block defined by its front and rear standards, like a traditional field camera. This is covered by a body-shell of carbon fibre, the bottom half of which stays in place when the camera is unfolded; the top is detached. When unfolded, each of the standards is mounted on a single upright, racking forward and back on a pair of rails in the base; this gives great freedom of camera movements, limited mostly by the bellows.
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The '''Carbon Infinity''' is a 4x5-inch view camera, designed and manufactured by British designers '''Angus Noble''' (see [[Noble Design]]) and '''Adrian Thompson''' in the early 1990s.<ref name=AN>[https://angusnoble.com/infinity-camera/ Infinity Camera] at [https://angusnoble.com/ Angus Noble].</ref><ref name=ND>[https://www.noble-design.co.uk/camera-portfolio 'Other Cameras'] at [https://www.noble-design.co.uk/ Noble Design]</ref> The bulk of the camera (85%% of the weight excluding the lens) is made from carbon fibre (in a diagonally striped grey and black pattern), the rest being aluminium, and titanium fittings.<ref name=ND/> The camera folds into a block defined by its front and rear standards, like a traditional field camera. This is covered by a body-shell of carbon fibre, the bottom half of which stays in place when the camera is unfolded; the top is detached. When unfolded, each of the standards is mounted on a single upright, on its own pair of rails in the base, racking forward and back with a knob on the right; this gives great freedom of camera movements, limited mostly by the bellows.
  
 
120 copies of the camera were made,<ref name=AN/> and sold in Japan and the USA. Nathan Congdon, in a post at the Large Format Photography forum, reports buying the last camera stocked by New York dealer Ken Hansen in 1999, and gives a review of the camera.<ref name=LFFP>[https://www.largeformatphotography.info/forum/showthread.php?4959-Carbon-Infinity-Follow-up-and-BRIEF-review Carbon Infinity: Follow-up and BRIEF review], a forum post at [https://www.largeformatphotography.info/forum/index.php Large Format Photography Forum] by Nathan Congdon.</ref> He states that the camera weighs 3.3 kg.
 
120 copies of the camera were made,<ref name=AN/> and sold in Japan and the USA. Nathan Congdon, in a post at the Large Format Photography forum, reports buying the last camera stocked by New York dealer Ken Hansen in 1999, and gives a review of the camera.<ref name=LFFP>[https://www.largeformatphotography.info/forum/showthread.php?4959-Carbon-Infinity-Follow-up-and-BRIEF-review Carbon Infinity: Follow-up and BRIEF review], a forum post at [https://www.largeformatphotography.info/forum/index.php Large Format Photography Forum] by Nathan Congdon.</ref> He states that the camera weighs 3.3 kg.

Latest revision as of 18:34, 16 February 2024

The Carbon Infinity is a 4x5-inch view camera, designed and manufactured by British designers Angus Noble (see Noble Design) and Adrian Thompson in the early 1990s.[1][2] The bulk of the camera (85%% of the weight excluding the lens) is made from carbon fibre (in a diagonally striped grey and black pattern), the rest being aluminium, and titanium fittings.[2] The camera folds into a block defined by its front and rear standards, like a traditional field camera. This is covered by a body-shell of carbon fibre, the bottom half of which stays in place when the camera is unfolded; the top is detached. When unfolded, each of the standards is mounted on a single upright, on its own pair of rails in the base, racking forward and back with a knob on the right; this gives great freedom of camera movements, limited mostly by the bellows.

120 copies of the camera were made,[1] and sold in Japan and the USA. Nathan Congdon, in a post at the Large Format Photography forum, reports buying the last camera stocked by New York dealer Ken Hansen in 1999, and gives a review of the camera.[3] He states that the camera weighs 3.3 kg.

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