From Camerapedia.org
Welta was a German camera maker based in Freital near Dresden. It was founded by Walter Waurich and Theodor Weber in 1914 as Weeka-Kamera-Werk and became Welta-Kamera-Werk in 1919.[1] It made a number of medium-priced folders before World War II, and its camera production was quite comparable to Balda and Certo. It also introduced two folding TLRs, the 6×6 Perfekta and the 6×9 Superfekta, which did not sell too well.
After the war, Welta continued production as a state company (VEB Welta-Kamera-Werk), with a range evolved from the prewar models. It absorbed Kamera-Werk Tharandt (the former Richter) in 1950. It became a part of the large VEB Kamera- und Kinowerk Dresden in 1959, a state owned conglomerate of East-German cameramakers that was to become VEB Pentacon in 1964.[2]
35mm film
Folding
Rigid
Half frame
120 film
Folding
Viewfinder
- Garant (6×9)
- Weltax (6×6)
- Perle (4.5×6, 6×6 or 6×9)
- Symbol (6×9)
- Trio (6×9)
Rangefinder
Folding TLR
Normal TLR
127 film
129 film
116 film
Film plates
Advertisements
Notes
- ↑ See this page at dresdner-kameras.de.
- ↑ See this page at dresdner-kameras.de.
Bibliography
Links