View allAll Photos Tagged Factory
The Müller Cloth Factory Museum, also known as Tuchfabrik Müller, is part of the LVR-Industriemuseum in Euskirchen, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. This unique museum offers visitors a fascinating journey back in time to the golden age of the cloth industry, around 100 years ago.
The factory was originally established in 1894 and operated until 1961, when business declined, and the factory owner locked the doors, leaving the production facilities as they were. For almost thirty years, the factory remained untouched, preserving a snapshot of the past. In 1990, it was reopened as a museum, allowing visitors to experience the historic cloth factory as it once was.
The museum features original machinery and tools, including looms, spinning machines, and dyeing equipment, all in their original positions. Guided tours take visitors through the production process, from raw wool to finished cloth, and provide insights into the working conditions and daily life of the factory workers.
The Tuchfabrik Müller is only accessible through guided tours, which are offered multiple times a day. The museum also hosts special events and exhibitions, making it a dynamic and engaging destination for history enthusiasts and those interested in industrial heritage.
Carley chats it up with some factory kids in Terrases, TJ. In TJ,
students write exams at the end of grade 7. If they do not make a high
enough grade, then they are out of school. Unless the family can
afford to send their children to private schools (about 100$ per
month), they are often sent to work in factories. The typical wage is
between 8 and 12 dollars a day for a 10 hour shift, and many kids
spend a couple hours a day on the bus to and from work.
I love this girl. Is this MaMa hair color? I haven't compared to my AE side by side yet so it could be AE.
This black and white image was taken off the Fuji 3000B negative and worked in Gimp. I wanted to catch the early evening sun and shadows.
Melba's Chocolates first started in a backyard shed in 1981, is now housed in the Heritage Listed former Southern Farmers Cheese Factory building at Woodside in the Adelaide Hills. Free Entry, See, Hear, Smell, and Taste. Melba's has viewing barriers and windows installed for visitors to see the Factory in action. Their Staff can be seen involved in a range of activities from making old fashion 1 Inch Licorice Blocks to Chocolate Coating fruit and nuts to Enrobing and depositing fine couveture chocolates.
Visitors are invited to wander between 5 production rooms and watch a traditional range of sweets being made on historic machinery.Samples and entry are free.
Canon 30D, 18-55
2010
Img_1980
She is from Lena. I'm not sure what I think of her. Anyone know anything about her? I think she looks like Emma Pilsbury from 'Glee' :-)
In the closing days of WWII The Japanese dug four small caves here for an airplane factory. They were only able to build one or two planes here before the end of the war!