Difference between revisions of "Ibso"
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+ | |image_source= http://www.flickr.com/photos/33883444@N08/8236250022/in/pool-camerawiki/ | ||
+ | |image= http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8210/8236250022_48a831c23c_n.jpg | ||
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+ | |image_text= Ibso shutter on a Romain Talbot folding camera | ||
+ | |image_by= John de Grooth | ||
+ | |image_rights= with permission | ||
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The '''Ibso''' shutter was made by [[Gauthier]] from 1908 onwards. It was the first [[everset shutter]] (i.e. an 'automatic' shutter, not needing to be cocked) on the market.<ref>[http://www.prontor.de/go/unternehmen-firmengeschichte/english.html Gauthier (now Prontor) company history] at [http://www.prontor.de/go/home/english.html Prontor GMBH].</ref> It is found on many folding cameras of the period. It has the usual limitation of everset shutters that it cannot offer very fast speeds; the original Ibso shutter gives speeds from 1 to 1/100 second, plus 'B' and 'T'. | The '''Ibso''' shutter was made by [[Gauthier]] from 1908 onwards. It was the first [[everset shutter]] (i.e. an 'automatic' shutter, not needing to be cocked) on the market.<ref>[http://www.prontor.de/go/unternehmen-firmengeschichte/english.html Gauthier (now Prontor) company history] at [http://www.prontor.de/go/home/english.html Prontor GMBH].</ref> It is found on many folding cameras of the period. It has the usual limitation of everset shutters that it cannot offer very fast speeds; the original Ibso shutter gives speeds from 1 to 1/100 second, plus 'B' and 'T'. | ||
Revision as of 06:20, 29 January 2014
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Ibso shutter on a Romain Talbot folding camera image by John de Grooth (Image rights) |
The Ibso shutter was made by Gauthier from 1908 onwards. It was the first everset shutter (i.e. an 'automatic' shutter, not needing to be cocked) on the market.[1] It is found on many folding cameras of the period. It has the usual limitation of everset shutters that it cannot offer very fast speeds; the original Ibso shutter gives speeds from 1 to 1/100 second, plus 'B' and 'T'.
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