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Faber-Castell

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Faber-Castell
Company typeJoint stock company
Industryindustry Edit this on Wikidata
PredecessorBleistift-Fabrik vorm. Johannes Faber Edit this on Wikidata
Founded1761
HeadquartersStein (Middle Franconia), Germany
Key people
Kasper Faber, Founder,
Anton Wolfgang Graf von Faber-Castell, CEO
Revenue€ 887 million (2005)
Number of employees
6.500 (2006)

Faber-Castell is one of the world's largest manufacturers of pens, pencils, other office supplies (e.g., staplers, slide rules, erasers, rulers)[1] and art supplies,[2] as well as high-end writing instruments and luxury leather goods. It operates 14 factories and 20 sales units (six in Europe, four in Asia, three in North America, five in South America, and one each in Australia and New Zealand).[3] The Faber-Castell Group employs a staff of approximately 7,000 and does business in more than 100 countries.[3]

Although its production began in Germany, only some of its premium pens are still manufactured there. Most of the company's consumer products are made in Malaysia. Faber-Castell USA is headquartered in Cleveland, Ohio, and is part of the global network of Faber-Castell companies operating in countries such as Australia, Brazil, and Malaysia.[4]

Products

Faber-Castell manufactures wood-cased pencils and runs a pencil factory in São Carlos, Brazil.[5] Their product line includes Design, Porsche Design and Graf von Faber-Castell. One of the company's most popular products among children is their Connector Pens. Faber-Castell is also well known for its brand of PITT Artist pens. The pens, used largely by comic and manga artists, emit an India ink that is both acid-free and archival, and comes in a variety of colors.

Graf von Faber-Castell released a line of luxury leather items that includes a leather desk mat and satin-bound writing paper which, when sold as a complete desk-set, retails for more than US$2,000.

From about 1880 to 1975 Faber-Castell was also one of the world's major manufacturers of slide rules, the best known of which was the 2/83N.

Origin and history

Geroldsgrün, Faber-Castell works
Faber-Castell works in Stein, Nuremberg

Founded in 1761 at Stein near Nuremberg by cabinet-maker Kaspar Faber (1730-1784), the enterprise remained in the Faber family for five generations.[6] It opened branches in New York (1849), London (1851), Paris (1855), and expanded to Vienna (1872) and St. Petersuburg (1874).[6] It opened a factory in Geroldsgrün where slide rules were produced. It expanded internationally and launched new products under Kaspar Faber's ambitious great-grandson, Lothar (1817-1896).[6] In 1900, after the marriage of Lothar's granddaughter with a cadet of the Counts of Castell, the A.W. Castell enterprise took the name of Faber-Castell and a new logo, combining the Faber motto, Since 1761, with the "jousting knights" of the Castells' coat-of-arms.[7]

The Castell family were mediatised counts of the old Holy Roman Empire, and as such ranked with the reigning dynasties of Europe.[8] In 1901 the head of the family was granted the hereditary title of Prince by Luitpold, Prince Regent of Bavaria.[8] A descendant of the first prince, Count Alexander Friedrich Lothar von Castell-Rüdenhausen (1866-1928) married Baroness Ottilie von Faber (1877-1944), heiress of the Faber pencil "dynasty" in 1898.[8] Although the immensely wealthy Lothar had been ennobled in 1861 and made Baron von Faber in the Kingdom of Bavaria in 1881,[6] in the German Empire his daughter's marriage to a mediatised nobleman would have been deemed morganatic, and the Count's trafficking in commerce considered an act of social derogation for a member of the Hochadel, so Alexander renounced his birth rank prior to the marriage. He was granted the new hereditary title of Count von Faber-Castell by Luitpold, Prince Regent of Bavaria for the descendants of his marriage to the Faber heiress.[8] Although Alexander and Ottilie divorced in 1918, the Faber business trust had conferred headship of the company on Alexander,[6] who even kept the Fabers' renovated palace at Stein (commandeered to billet journalists during the Nuremberg trials, including Ernest Hemingway and John Steinbeck).[9] In 1927 Alexander resumed his original name for himself, his second wife (born a countess, Margit Zedtwitz von Moravan und Duppau, 1886-1973), and their son, Count Radulf (1922-2004). His issue by the first marriage had never been considered dynasts of the House of Castell, but they inherited the vast Faber fortune and continue to include Castell in their name with the comital title.

Alexander and Ottilie's only son, Count Roland Lothar Wolfgang Christian Ernst Wilhelm von Faber-Castell (1905-1978), inherited headship of the Faber-Castell companies from his parents.[6] By his second marriage in 1938 to Katharina Sprecher von Bernegg (1917-1994), Roland was the father of the current head of the family, Count Anton-Wolfgang Lothar Andreas von Faber-Castell. Anton-Wolfgang was born in Bamberg 7 June 1941, was married (briefly) in Las Vegas on 16 June 1986 to Carla Mathilde Lamesch—mother of his only son, Count Charles Alexander von Faber-Castell, who was born in Zürich 20 June 1980—and he wed secondly, at Stein on 12 December 1987, Mary Hogan (b. 1951), by whom he has three daughters.

Anton-Wolfgang's niece, Countess Floria-Franziska von Faber-Castell (b. 1974) was married at Kronberg on 17 May 2003 in a much-publicised wedding attended by members of Europe's reigning families, to Donatus, Hereditary Prince of Hesse, a great-grandson of King Victor Emmanuel III of Italy and a grand-nephew of Princess Sophie of Greece and Denmark, sister of Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. Floria is a daughter of Hubertus (1937-1971), second son of Roland. Various branches of the Faber-Castell family still flourish, but in the past the Faber and Faber-Castell corporate holdings have usually passed to the eldest male of the patrilineage,[6] currently Count Anton-Wolfgang, third of Count Roland's five sons.

Drawing with Faber-Castell

In 2007, a movie starring Einstien Kristiansen was released called Drawing with Faber-Castell.

References

  1. ^ Faber-Castell International. Office Products
  2. ^ Faber-Castell International. Products for FineArts and Design
  3. ^ a b Faber-Castell International. The company facts & figures
  4. ^ Faber-Castell International. About Us
  5. ^ Faber-Castell International. Office Products
  6. ^ a b c d e f g Faber-Castell International. The History of the Faber-Castell Company
  7. ^ Faber-Castell International. The Company Logo
  8. ^ a b c d Almanach de Gotha. 1910. Perthes, p. 107, 109, 120-121. Deuxième Partie
  9. ^ Faber-Castell International. The Faber-Castell Castle