Two firsts for me: starting the weekend thread, and posting a couple of pictures from a Werra 1C, a camera that I've long ignored. My dad went on a camera accumulation spree from the mid 70s to mid 80s. The Werra sat on the shelf for a good 40 years, maybe longer, before I decided to dust it off a couple of weeks ago and see if it was suitable for a newbie photographer. It is not.
The Werra is an (almost but not quite) endearing little camera, simultaneously modern and archaic. Stunning timeless design, mind-numbingly awful ergonomics. For example: as you focus closer, from infinity to 0.9m, the aperture ring rotates from the top to the bottom of the lens and disappears from view. Frame counter, rewind knob (early versions) or crank (later versions), and back removal lock, are on the bottom and clearly served as a model for the Rollei 35. Film advance and shutter wind are done with a ring around the lens mount. Since Jena was a lens factory, the camera was designed primarily by optical engineers, so some of the mechanical features I suppose are defensible, but lens operation itself is baffling, particularly for a post-war camera.
Lens is a 50/2.8 Tessar, from the post-war Zeiss Jena factory which had the misfortune of ending up on the "wrong" side of Germany. It's supposed to be coated and I've shot with a variety of Tessar lenses over the years, but I've never had results like these on a single roll of film (Fomapan 400) in the same camera. For #12, the alley cat, the sun was just off axis of the lens, to the left. The 1960 Cadillac is a neighbor's, with the sun behind the camera.
For now, the Werra's back in the box and on a new shelf.