hal9000
Member
I was with a friend shooting in Ferropolis (www.ferropolis.de) today and noticed in a brochure what looked like a small old camera exhibit at the old ORWO factory in Wolfen, Germany. ORWO (Original Wolfen) is what the East German AGFA (at the original AGFA site) changed its name to in 1964 when their contract expired with the West German AGFA company in Leverkusen. This is the site that the world's first color film was produced (well, one version in any case). Anyway, ORWO stopped making film and 1993 but they do continue some confectioning and production of film base (and other) plastic foils.
So we drove there and happened to arrive just as a former ORWO employee was about to give a tour and so we joined in. It was really quite fascinating, we got to see all the machines that were used for producing film base (in rolls of 120 cm x 300 meters), preparation for coating, preparation of emulsion, coating, drying, cutting, perforation, and finally confection as roll film, 35mm cartridges, bulk film and super 8. And then we got to view their camera collection in walls of glass cases. Drool! More folders, antique studio cameras and other cameras of all sorts (many East German, Russian and Czech models but also quite a few western ones) than I have ever seen in one place. We even got a little souvenir at the end - no, not that nice Super Isolette in the case
but a piece of 35mm film with todays date perforated into it by one of their old perforation machines.
So if anyone is ever in the neighborhood, I would highly recommend a visit to the ORWO plant. They have a website (unfortunately only in German) at http://www.ifm-wolfen.de/Service/service.htm.
So we drove there and happened to arrive just as a former ORWO employee was about to give a tour and so we joined in. It was really quite fascinating, we got to see all the machines that were used for producing film base (in rolls of 120 cm x 300 meters), preparation for coating, preparation of emulsion, coating, drying, cutting, perforation, and finally confection as roll film, 35mm cartridges, bulk film and super 8. And then we got to view their camera collection in walls of glass cases. Drool! More folders, antique studio cameras and other cameras of all sorts (many East German, Russian and Czech models but also quite a few western ones) than I have ever seen in one place. We even got a little souvenir at the end - no, not that nice Super Isolette in the case

So if anyone is ever in the neighborhood, I would highly recommend a visit to the ORWO plant. They have a website (unfortunately only in German) at http://www.ifm-wolfen.de/Service/service.htm.