


^ a b Lápices alemanes con cuatro siglos de historia familiar by María Matos Elices on El País.^ © 2007, Hoover's, Inc., All Rights Reserved.The following chart contains all the Staedtler product lines:
German pen company with red swan logo series#
Staedtler's products include: Noris, Mars Lumograph (pencils) Mars plastic (erasers) 925- series (mechanical pencils), Mars micro (pencil leads) Triplus (fineliners) Textsurfer (highlighters) Lumocolor (markers, colored pencils etc.). In addition, the company celebrated its 175th anniversary that same year. Īs from 2010, Fimo ( modelling clay products), Mali, Aquasoft and further brands were marketed under the Staedtler name.

Nevertheless, in 2009 Staedtler sold the rights to the brand "Eberhard Faber" to Faber-Castell, although the company kept the Neumarkt factory, where Staedtler makes wood pencils nowadays. In the 1970s, Staedtler bought the Neumarkt factory, which used to be the Eberhard Faber factory. In 1967 the Italian subsidiary, in Milan, was established. In 1962 the company began producing technical pens. This logo has had several style modifications since then, the last in 2001. The head of Mars became the Staedtler definitive logo in 1958. This brand was used to design the wide range of Staedtler markers. Four years later, the "Lumocolor" brand was registered. In 1950 propelling pencils (or mechanical pencils) began to be manufactured, the first being made out of wood. In 1949 began the production of ballpoint pens, which started to be widely used instead of fountain pens (although Staedtler still produces the latter today). In 1937 the name was changed to Mars Pencil and Fountain Pen Factory and the product range was expanded to include mechanical writing instruments. In 1922 a United States subsidiary (located in New York) was established, It was followed by a Japanese subsidiary four years later. In 1901 the Noris brand was released by the company. In 1900, Staedtler registered the Mars brand (which represented the Ancient Roman god of war), using the name for some lines of products, also launching the head of Mars logo, and the Staedtler products are distributed in Italy in the same year. įirst version of the "head of Mars" logo, released in 1908 In 1866, the company had 54 employees and produced 15,000 gross (2,160,000 pencils) per year. Staedtler received permission from the municipal council to produce black lead, red chalk and pastel pencils in his industrial plant. The company was founded by Johann Sebastian Staedtler in 1835 as a pencil factory, first established in Nuremberg, but the roots of the company go back to 1662, when references to Friedrich Staedtler as a pencil-making craftsman were made in the city annals. Eventually, Staedtler's work helped to abolish that regulation, therefore facilitating the work of other pencil manufacturers in Nuremberg. However, that activity was forbidden by the Council of Nuremberg, which stated that the manufacturing had to be developed by two different experts. The origins of the brand can be traced since the 17th century, when Friedrich Staedtler took over the totality of the pencil manufacturing process, from the lead to the wood. Its " Noris' line of pencils is extremely common in British schools. Almost two thirds of the production take place in the four production facilities in Nuremberg, Germany, though some of its products are made in Japan. Staedtler has over 26 global subsidiaries and nine manufacturing facilities. Staedtler claims to be the largest European manufacturer of wood-cased pencils, overhead projector pens, mechanical pencils, leads, erasers, and modelling clays. Staedtler (1800–1872) in 1835 and produces a large variety of stationery products, such as writing implements (including technical drawing instruments), art materials, and office supplies. KG ( German pronunciation: ) is a German multinational stationery manufacturing company based in Nuremberg.
