a tradition brand
Blomberg is here. It is a German traditional brand. Back then in the 50s and 60s a lot of washer factories were in the "Ruhrpott" area, the largest mining area or Germany. Coal and iron (thus steel) were readily available and more than a dozen of companies thrived on that (Cordes, Blomberg, Brocke, Frauenlob (which roughly translates "Ladies' praise"), EBD (acronym of Erwin Brocke in Duisburg), Scharpf, Zanker and others.
ALL of them made rugged and solid full-metal beasts of washers, mostly self-heating impeller machines or twin tubs. The only one remaining from "Ruhrpott" area (read: North Rhine Westfalia) is Miele.
Unfortunately Blomberg couldn't quite get the shift to automatics back then. So as early as in the 80s they were sold and resold and resold again (now being just a brand name within the large Arcelik/Beko pool of reselling relabeling broker corporations buying stuff from lowly paid working areas = Turkey, Poland, China and what have you).
Yet: I have tried one of them lately and for being considered "low end", they perform amazingly well. I would consider them "budget middle class". Of course: Design and service resources have changed, their head quarters are in Neu-Isenburg now, the Frankfurt (Rhein-Main) area being most suitable for easy transport and logistics (mind the huge airport). Good enough for a purely "selling" corporation today.
So if you want Bosch/Siemens performance with some little notches down the ladder what comes to service and parts, you might be well off with a Blomberg of today. Should you ever happen to find an old-style Blomberg (1950s and 60s) be prepared to get a heavyweight beast to last a century (having been sold way too cheap for such a quality).
Jsneaker: "tiny"? I am overhearing that. Frontloaders such as this will wash WAY more items in it than same cubic foot (blender type American) toploaders. But try for yourself. Ok, the price is debatable but on the other hand US products are as much as double "your price over there" here as well. It's called "customs" and "freight" going both ways (and man, these costs can be filthy, bet you...had my share).
So Blomberg machines of "today"? You will love them washing but have a reliable service source in stash if you live in the US. Here it is no problem, most parts are interchangeable with many other brands.