Faber-Castell
Type | Joint stock company |
---|---|
Industry | Stationery |
Predecessor | Bleistift-Fabrik vorm. Johannes Faber |
Founded | 1761 |
Founder | Kaspar Faber |
Headquarters | , Germany |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people | Stefan Leitz (CEO) Constantin Neubeck (CFO) Countess Mary von Faber-Castell |
Products | Art materials, Writing instruments |
Revenue | €587.5 million (2019) |
Number of employees | 6,500 (2006) |
Website | www |
Faber-Castell is one of the world's largest and oldest 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. Headquartered in Stein, Germany, it operates 14 factories and 20 sales units throughout the globe. The Faber-Castell Group employs a staff of approximately 7,000 and does business in more than 100 countries.[3] The House of Faber-Castell is the family which founded and continues to exercise leadership within the corporation. They manufacture about 2 billion pencils in more than 120 different colors every year.[4]
History[]
This section needs expansion with: Corporate history from 1900 to today. You can help by . (February 2015) |
Faber-Castell was founded in 1761 at Stein near Nuremberg by cabinet maker Kaspar Faber (1730–84) as the A.W. Faber Company, and has remained in the Faber family for eight generations. It opened branches in New York (1849), London (1851), Paris (1855), and expanded to Vienna (1872) and St. Petersburg (1874). It opened a factory in Geroldsgrün, Bavaria, where slide rules were produced. It expanded internationally and launched new products under Kaspar Faber's ambitious great-grandson, Johann Lothar Freiherr von Faber (1817–96).[5]
In 1900, after the marriage of Lothar's granddaughter and heiress with a count of Castell, the A.W. Faber 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.[6] A.W. Faber is the oldest brand-name pencil continuously sold in the US, having begun sales in 1870.[4]
Today, the company operates 14 factories and 20 sales units, with six in Europe, four in Asia, three in North America, five in South America, and one each in Australia and New Zealand. The Faber-Castell Group employs a staff of approximately 7,000 and does business in more than 100 countries.[3]
Products[]
Beginning in the 1850s Faber started to use graphite from Siberia and cedar wood from Florida to produce its pencils.[4]
Faber-Castell is well known for its brand of PITT Artist pens. The pens, used by comic and manga artists such as Adam Hughes,[7] emit an India ink that is both acid-free and archival, and comes in a variety of colors.
The following chart contains all the Faber-Castell product lines.[8]
Category | Products |
---|---|
Professional Art and Graphic (Green Line) | Pencils (graphite and color), pastels, charcoals, erasers, sharpeners |
Kids & School Art and Graphic (Red Line) | Pencils, watercolors, brushes, markers, crayons, erasers, sharpeners, modeling dough, oil pastels, papers, connector pens |
Technical Drawing (Green Line) | Mechanical pencils, refills |
Pens | Fountain pens, ballpoint pens, refills |
Luxury Pens | Fountain pens, ballpoint pen |
Papers | Notebooks, diaries, creative papers, reams, calendars |
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.
Manufacturing[]
There are about 16 manufacturing plants (in 10 countries) which mainly manufacture writing instruments.[9]
Countries | Plant Name | Year Incorporated | Products Manufactured |
---|---|---|---|
Costa Rica | Neily | 1996 | Pencils (graphite and colour) |
Peru | Lima | 1965 | Erasers, rules and writing equipment, and finetip and colour markers |
Colombia | Bogotá | 1976 | Wax crayons and drawing accessories |
Brazil | Prata | 1989 | Nurseries for pine trees and sawmill |
Brazil | Manaus | 1989 | Erasers,rules and writing equipment |
Brazil | São Carlos | 1950s | Pencils (graphite and colour), makeup, school line (pencils, sharpeners, poster and finger paints, crayons,markers) technical and fine arts line (permanent markers), office line (highlighter, executive and promotional pens),notebooks and creative papers |
India | Goa | 1998 | Erasers,rules and writing equipment, and finetip and colour markers |
Austria | Engelhartszell | 1963 | Highlighters and permanent-ink markers (manufacturing, assembly and paints) |
Malaysia | Kuala Lumpur | 1978 | Research & Development, Asia and Pacific office Sales, school line (pencils,erasers and writing products) |
Nigeria | Enugu | 1961 | Makeup Products |
China | Guangzhou | 2000 | school line (sharpeners, erasers and writing instruments) |
Indonesia | Bekasi | 1990 | Pencils (graphite and colour) |
Germany | Stein | 1761 | Research & Development, global sales and marketing office, school line (pencils, erasers and writing products), premium line (pencils, erasers and writing products) |
Gallery[]
Malaysian tri-Grip pencils with eraser caps and a sharpener
Erasers
Polychromos pencil line
2/83N slide rule
Poly mechanical pencil
TK lead pointer and 2 mm pencil lead
See also[]
- Graf von Faber-Castell
- Faber-Castell Family
- Sal. Oppenheim Jr. & Cie.
- House of Hesse
- Mariella Ahrens
- Oppenheim family
- Sadik Eliyesil
References[]
- ^ Faber-Castell International. Office Products Archived 2009-12-16 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Faber-Castell International. Products for FineArts and FineWriting Archived 2009-12-15 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Jump up to: a b Faber-Castell International. The company facts & figures Archived 2014-08-12 at archive.today
- ^ Jump up to: a b c "Inside the oldest pencil company in the world". CNN. Retrieved February 18, 2019.
- ^ "History". Faber-Castell International. Retrieved February 18, 2019.
- ^ Faber-Castell International. The Company Logo Archived 2014-08-12 at archive.today
- ^ Coulson, Steve. "Adam Hughes – Anatomy of a sketch, Pt3 – The Tools" YouTube; May 15, 2006, Accessed September 8, 2010
- ^ Faber Castell products Archived 2011-07-14 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Müller, Nicole. "The international Faber-Castell Production Sites". Faber-Castell. Archived from the original on 2016-06-11. Retrieved 2016-05-15.
External links[]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Faber-Castell. |
- Official website
- Graf von Faber-Castell – Luxury writing instruments
- Faber-Castell slide rule collection
- Faber-Castell: The future of the pencil
- Faber-Castell's eraser collection
- BBC visits Nuremberg in Germany to look at Staedtler and Faber-Castell's productive pencil rivalry. Audio, 28 minutes.
- Documents and clippings about Faber-Castell in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW
- Watercolor brands
- Companies based in Bavaria
- Companies established in 1761
- Fountain pen and ink manufacturers
- German brands
- Office supply companies of Germany
- Pencil brands
- Writing implements