Montegrappa Celebrates St. Moritz With New Limited Edition
Montegrappa Celebrates St. Moritz With New Limited Edition
June 26, 2012
Montegrappa, Italy’s most revered manufacturer of fine writing implements, has captured the spirit of St. Moritz in a series of
luxurious pens. The hand-crafted fountain pens and roller balls are apt representations of both the village itself and the aura
that surrounds it. For 2012, a new quartet of pens has been introduced, in the tradition of the previous series, now highly
collectible.
St. Moritz is like no other resort, for it has come to symbolise all that a Swiss destination should be: genteel and refined,
exclusive yet welcoming. So great is the impact that St. Moritz has had on the global consciousness, since it first welcomed skiers
nearly 150 years ago, that it has grown to be both cinematic and literary “shorthand” for luxurious getaways.
Located in the Engadin valley, St. Moritz first attracted visitors and functioned as a proper resort in 1864, when hotelier
Johannes Badrutt made a wager that would resonate forever throughout Switzerland. His bet with four British summer-season visitors
proffered that, should they return in winter and not find it as pleasurable a vacation as their warm weather sojourn, he would pay
the cost of their round-trip. It was a win-win situation for them, as he also offered to pay for their visit, to stay as long
as they wished, if they did find St. Moritz to be attractive in winter. That example of genteel gamesmanship not only established
St. Moritz as a ski resort, it also launched the Alps on the whole, as a destination for vacationing skiers.
Over the years, St. Moritz would host the first European Ice-Skating Championships (1882), the first golf tournament held in the
Alps (1889), a horse race on snow (1906) and the opening of Switzerland’s first ski school (1929). It has twice hosted the Winter
Olympics – in 1928 and 1948 – as well as over 30 Bobsled World Championships, four Alpine Ski World Championships and numerous 40
Engadin Ski Marathons. So rich is St. Moritz’s winter sport heritage that it now exemplifies the Swiss sporting vacation ethos.
As far back as 1934, Alfred Hitchcock used it for the opening scenes of The Man Who Knew Too Much, while it was cited exactly
30 years later in the James Bond film, Goldfinger, and referred to in 1981’s For Your Eyes Only. Bond’s creator Ian Fleming
clearly knew a good thing when he found it: locations near St. Moritz also served as headquarters for the villain Blofeld in
the novel, On Her Majesty’s Secret Service. Most romantically, singer-songwriter Peter Sarstedt listed St. Moritz amongst the
elite locales in his immortal “Where Do You Go To My Lovely”, its mere mention conveying haute monde elegance.
But St. Moritz supports much more than skiing, golf and other leisure pursuits. Every year, this town welcomes the arts, celebrated
with exhibitions, seminars, walks and other attractions. The St. Moritz Arts Masters is an annual gathering of artists
and collectors, experts and critics, presenting a rare opportunity for the public to savour the art world in all of its aspects,
in a breath-taking Alpine environment.
It is fitting, then, that the representation of the village be both a tool an artist might use – a pen – and an objet d’art
embellished with visual representations of St. Moritz itself. To decorate the pens’ barrels, Montegrappa’s designers have
chosen four historic posters redolent of St. Moritz’s charms, each image hand-painted by artist Lorena Straffi.
The pens are fashioned from celluloid, a costly material made from cotton fibre mixed with natural pigments and mother-of-pearl,
and are further adorned with either sterling silver or 18K gold.
Montegrappa’s new St. Moritz collection encompasses four themes, represented by period posters of timeless appeal:
• Automobile Week 1929, by Baumberger – encapsulated in the image of a sleek red racing car heading toward the mountains
at great speed
• Grosses Ski Rennen der Schweiz (Big Swiss Ski Race) 1911, by Kupfer – with a pensive skier pondering the race
in which he is about to compete
• Tea time by the Engadin lake 1920, by Stiefel – showing the restful aspects of St. Moritz, as an elegant resort
• Woman in a red jacket 1925, by Daester – redolent of the great Art Deco period during which it was created
The 2012 St. Moritz Limited Edition comprises 300 fountain pens and 300 rollerballs with sterling silver trim and a special limited
edition of eight fountain pens and eight roller balls with solid 18K gold trim per design. Your Montegrappa St. Moritz pen will
serve as a permanent, evocative reminder of Switzerland’s jewel of a resort every time it touches paper.
For exactly 100 years, since 1912, Montegrappa has been manufacturing high-quality writing instruments in the same historic
building in Bassano del Grappa, North East Italy.