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    Victorinox is a knife manufacturer headquartered in the town of Ibach, in the Canton of Schwyz, Switzerland. It is primarily known as one of the two official suppliers of Swiss Army knives (the other being Wenger, which it acquired in spring of 2005).


        Victorinox
            History
            Products
                Swiss Army knives
                SwissCard
                SwissTool
                Watches
                Kitchen Cutlery
                Brand extension

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    History
    The company was founded in 1884. Since 1891 the company has delivered knives to the Swiss army. Their famous emblem — a cross in a shield — has been used by Victorinox since 1909. That year, the mother of founder Karl Elsener died and he changed the name of the company to "Victoria" in her honor. In 1921, with the introduction of "inox" (the French term for stainless steel is acier inoxydable) into their products, the brand and name of the company became the present "Victorinox" ("Victoria"+"Inox").

    On 26 April 2005 Victorinox acquired Wenger, the other official supplier of the Swiss Army knife. For now, Victorinox has announced that it intends to keep both brands intact.

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    Products






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    Swiss Army knives
    The Swiss Army knife is the product that has been the centerpiece of Victorinox's business. Originally the sole supplier, since 1908 it has shared the contract with Wenger. A compromise between the two companies gave Victorinox the right to advertise as the Original Swiss Army Knife, while Wenger lays claim to the title of Genuine Swiss Army Knife. Victorinox used large plastic models of their knife to make their brand stand out.

    Swiss Army knives are widely used outside the army. They are useful multifunctional instruments for everyday life and are available in a wide variety of sizes and functional combinations. Even NASA astronauts have a Victorinox knife as standard equipment. Victorinox knives have also been taken to Mt. Everest and the Arctic. The flagship model of Victorinox, the SwissChamp, is in the New York Museum of Modern Art's Permanent Design Collection.

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    SwissCard
    One of the ways that Victorinox has tried to adapt to the decreased usage of pocket knives in recent years is the introduction of other forms of multi-purpose gadgets such as the SwissCard which is designed to fit wherever a thick credit card would go.

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    SwissTool
    SwissTools are Victorinox's version of Leatherman style tools. They fold out and include 22 tools.

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    Watches
    The Swiss Army brand has produced a number of pocket and wrist watches as well. They range from closable watches to classic bare clock watches. They can also be engraved.

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    Kitchen Cutlery
    A wide assortment of functional tableware and kitchen cutlery is sold by Victorinox but without having the Swiss Army shield logo of Victorinox's other product lines upon them. Additionally, Victorinox also markets kitchen cutlery under the Forschner brand name. Forschner knives, though stamped blade in construction rather than forged, tend to recieve high marks in consumer comparisons, and have been identified as particularly good values by the American magazine Cook's Illustrated.

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    Brand extension
    Recently, Victorinox has leveraged their brand image beyond the realm of blades into watches, writing tools, luggage (through TRG Group), and even apparel. This extension has involved licensing the use of the Swiss Army shield logo rather than production by the company itself.
     
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    This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License [copyleft]. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Victorinox". link